Dutch Trade Surplus Widens in February
2026-04-13 04:53
By
Kyrie Dichosa
1 min. read
The Netherlands’ trade surplus widened to EUR 9.90 billion in February 2026 from EUR 9.45 billion a year earlier, as exports declined at a slower pace than imports.
Exports fell 4.0% year-on-year to EUR 61.44 billion, reflecting lower sales to non-EU countries (-12.1%), while exports to EU countries rose 1.4%.
Among commodities, outbound shipments declined most for mineral fuels and lubricants (-11.1%), beverages and tobacco (-8%), food and live animals (-5.6%), and raw materials (-3.8%).
Meanwhile, imports dropped at a faster pace of 5.5% to EUR 51.54 billion, as purchases fell from both EU (-1.3%) and non-EU (-9.3%) markets.
Arrivals were sharply lower for mineral fuels and lubricants (-22.4%) and, to a lesser extent, for miscellaneous manufactured goods (-5.9%).
In the first two months of the year, the Dutch trade surplus stood at EUR 19.45 billion, as exports declined 4.8% while imports fell 5.8%.