U.S. Census Bureau 2025 full year Total trade: #21 of 23

U.S.–Australia trade — exports, imports & trade balance (U.S. Census)

$62.7BTotal trade ・1.1% of the world total
$33.7BExports (U.S. → partner)
$29BImports (partner → U.S.)
$4.8BTrade balance・(exports exceed imports = a U.S. surplus)

U.S.–Australia goods trade in 2025 totaled ≈$62.66B, No.21 of 23 (1.1% of world trade) — a U.S. trade surplus of ≈$4.75B.

Exports ≈$33.71B; imports ≈$28.95B; trade balance +≈$4.75B (U.S. exports more).

The U.S. exports more than it imports with this partner.

A key ally. Trade centers on machinery, minerals, and beef; the U.S. tends to run a surplus.

Annual trade

  • Exports (U.S. → partner)$33.7B (total exports, U.S. → partner)
  • Imports (partner → U.S.)$29B (general imports, partner → U.S.)
  • Trade balance$4.8B (exports exceed imports = a U.S. surplus)
  • Total trade$62.7B (1.1% of the world total)

Year-by-year trend (past 12 years)

U.S.–Australia goods trade has risen about 68% from 2014 to 2025 (≈$37.38B to ≈$62.66B), with a U.S. surplus in the latest year.

201420162018202020222024

Exports (U.S. → partner) Imports (partner → U.S.)

Year Exports (U.S. → partner) Imports (partner → U.S.) Trade balance Total trade
2025 $33.7B $29B $4.8B $62.7B
2024 $34.6B $16.6B $17.9B $51.2B
2023 $33.6B $15.9B $17.7B $49.5B
2022 $0 $16.1B −$16.1B $16.1B
2021 $26.5B $12.5B $14B $38.9B
2020 $0 $14.4B −$14.4B $14.4B
2019 $0 $10.8B −$10.8B $10.8B
2018 $25.3B $10.1B $15.3B $35.4B
2017 $24.5B $10B $14.5B $34.6B
2016 $22.1B $9.5B $12.6B $31.7B
2015 $25B $10.9B $14.1B $35.9B
2014 $26.7B $10.7B $16B $37.4B

Each year is a full calendar-year (January–December) total. Source: U.S. Census Bureau foreign-trade statistics (goods). Statistics may be revised.

About these figures

Figures are country-level aggregates of goods trade based on U.S. Census Bureau foreign-trade statistics. Exports are total exports; imports are general imports (goods arriving in the U.S.); both are totals for the latest available full calendar year (January–December). The trade balance is exports minus imports — positive means a U.S. surplus. Statistics may be revised, and services trade (travel, IP royalties, etc.) is not included.

Sources (primary)

This article is an independent summary based on the official U.S. data below. Please verify the latest and exact details with the official sources.

This product uses the Census Bureau Data API but is not endorsed or certified by the Census Bureau.

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