UK Trade Balance Swings to Surplus
2026-03-13 07:15
By
Judith Sib-at
1 min. read
The UK recorded a trade surplus of £3.92 billion in January 2026, a sharp reversal from a £4.34 billion deficit in the previous month.
This marks the first surplus since September 2024, as exports increased and imports declined.
Exports rose 7.2% month-on-month to a record £82.51 billion, while imports fell 3.3% to a one-year low of £78.59 billion.
Goods exports climbed 6.7% to £35.53 billion, driven by higher shipments to both EU (6.2%) and non-EU countries (7.1%).
Exports to the EU was due to increases in machinery and transport equipment as well as fuel exports.
Exports to non-EU markets were led by chemicals, particularly medicinal and pharmaceutical products to China, Turkey, and Brazil.
In contrast, exports of goods to the US fell 11.3%, amid lower sales of machinery and transport equipment, specifically cars.
Services exports edged up 0.2% to £46.98 billion.
On the import side, goods imports decreased 0.6% to £49.98 billion, while services imports rose 0.4% to £28.61 billion.