Sri Lanka Trade Deficit More Than Doubles in May

2026-06-30 14:29 By Isabela Couto 1 min. read

Sri Lanka’s trade deficit widened to $968 million in May 2026 from $473 million a year earlier, marking a 104.8% increase as import growth outpaced export gains.

Imports surged 45.4% to $2.19 billion, with fuel import spending jumping 112% due to higher oil prices and larger volumes.

Exports rose 13.4% to $1.70 billion, supported by an 18.3% increase in goods shipments to $1.2 billion, while services exports edged up 2.5% to $475 million.

In the first five months of the year, Sri Lanka’s cumulative trade deficit reached $4.66 billion.



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Sri Lanka Trade Deficit More Than Doubles in May
Sri Lanka’s trade deficit widened to $968 million in May 2026 from $473 million a year earlier, marking a 104.8% increase as import growth outpaced export gains. Imports surged 45.4% to $2.19 billion, with fuel import spending jumping 112% due to higher oil prices and larger volumes. Exports rose 13.4% to $1.70 billion, supported by an 18.3% increase in goods shipments to $1.2 billion, while services exports edged up 2.5% to $475 million. In the first five months of the year, Sri Lanka’s cumulative trade deficit reached $4.66 billion.
2026-06-30
Sri Lanka Trade Deficit Hits Record High
Sri Lanka’s trade deficit widened to $1.38 billion in April 2026, the largest gap since records began in 2002 and up 27% from a year earlier. Goods imports surged 45.7% year-on-year to $2.46 billion, driven by a 149.9% jump in fuel imports to $886 million amid soaring global oil prices linked to the Middle East conflict and higher import volumes. Motor vehicle imports also totaled $208 million. Meanwhile, exports increased 10.9% to $1.07 billion. In the first four months of 2026, the trade deficit widened to $3.7 billion from $2.3 billion in the same period of 2025.
2026-05-29
Sri Lanka Trade Deficit Widens
Sri Lanka’s trade deficit widened to $776 million in February 2026, the largest trade deficit in four months and up from $411.3 million in the same month a year earlier, as import growth significantly outpaced the marginal increase in exports. Goods exports rose 0.47% year-on-year to $1,057.8 million, driven by broad-based gains across most product categories. Mining products surged 142.86%, led by higher shipments of earths and stone. Agricultural exports increased 1.53%, particularly rubber, while industrial product exports declined 0.06%. Meanwhile, goods imports rose significantly by 25.24% year-on-year to $1,833.8 million. Consumer goods imports jumped 35.7%, mainly reflecting higher purchases of personal vehicles, which totaled $204.8 million, including both personal and commercial vehicles. Investment goods imports also rose 35%. These increases were partially offset by a decline in imports of intermediate goods of 11.92% in the prior period but rose 18.26% this month.
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