PHNOM PENH — Cambodia’s international trade in goods continues to demonstrate robust momentum, crossing the $30 billion threshold during the first five months of 2026. This represents an aggressive year-on-year increase of nearly 20% compared to the same period in 2025. However, alongside expanding global market reach, the Southeast Asian nation continues to manage a widening trade deficit, highlighting its heavy reliance on imported capital goods and industrial raw materials to feed its rapid industrial modernization.
GDCE Reports Explosive Growth in Import-Export Volumes
According to official macroeconomic data released by the General Department of Customs and Excise (GDCE), the total cumulative value of Cambodia’s imports and exports reached a record $30.08 billion from January to May 2026. This marks an 18.9% surge compared to the $25.29 billion recorded during the corresponding period last year.
A granular breakdown of the GDCE metrics reveals robust, synchronized expansion across both inbound and outbound trade flows:
- Outbound Shipments (Exports): Cambodia exported goods worth $14.04 billion, accelerating by 19% year-on-year.
- Inbound Shipments (Imports): Sourced merchandise arriving in the Kingdom reached $16.04 billion, matching the upward momentum with an 18.9% spike.
The Expanding Regional Trade Gap
Despite stellar export performance, the matching trajectory of imports pushed Cambodia’s absolute international trade deficit to approximately $1.99 billion for the five-month period. This is an increase from the $1.68 billion deficit recorded over the same duration in 2025.
The expansion of this deficit underscores the rising domestic demand for machinery, energy resources, and raw materials required to sustain local production lines and major infrastructure projects.
Strategic Export Markets and Key Trading Partners
Cambodia’s trade architecture remains anchored by deep commercial linkages with major global economies. The GDCE identified the nation’s primary trading partners as China, the United States, Vietnam, and Japan.
While the United States remains a dominant consumer of Cambodian manufacturing—particularly garments, footwear, and travel goods—China continues to dominate as a key source of inbound capital goods, raw textiles, and construction components. Concurrently, Vietnam and Japan serve as indispensable partners for agricultural exchanges and cross-border regional value chains.
Key Performance Metrics: Jan–May Trade Breakdown (2025 vs. 2026)
| Trade Indicator | Jan–May 2025 Value | Jan–May 2026 Value | YoY Change (%) |
| Total Exports | $11.80 Billion | $14.04 Billion | +19.0% |
| Total Imports | $13.49 Billion | $16.04 Billion | +18.9% |
| Aggregate Trade | $25.29 Billion | $30.08 Billion | +18.9% |
| Trade Balance (Deficit) | -$1.68 Billion | -$1.99 Billion | +18.5% |
Infrastructural and Policy Drivers Behind Economic Resilience
Analyzing the macroeconomic environment, Hong Vanak, a prominent economist at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, noted that the nation is successfully neutralizing global headwinds through targeted domestic enhancements. Speaking on June 10, Vanak highlighted that concerted efforts by the public and private sectors are shifting the economic trajectory upward.
“Although global economic growth remains fragile, and border tensions caused by Thailand have affected cross-border trade flows, Cambodia’s international trade activities have not declined,” Vanak stated.
He attributed this sustained resilience to a combination of foundational structural advantages:
- Proactive Government Policies: Enhanced legal frameworks, favorable new investment laws, and strong fiscal incentives that cultivate an attractive ecosystem for both domestic and foreign direct investment (FDI).
- Infrastructure Modernization: Rapid upgrades to transport networks, deep-sea ports, and logistical channels that reduce overall transactional overhead for manufacturers.
- Preferential Trade Agreements: Active leveraging of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), bilateral Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), and preferential tariff systems that guarantee seamless entry into diversified export destinations.
Looking Ahead: Macroeconomic Projections and Historical Baseline
The current acceleration aligns closely with Cambodia’s overall economic performance in 2025. Historic data shows that in 2025, Cambodia’s total annual trade with all global partners concluded at $64.03 billion, marking a 16.8% increase from 2024. Total 2025 exports hovered at $30.15 billion (+14.7%), against annual imports of $33.88 billion (+18.7%), yielding a full-year trade deficit of $3.73 billion.
If the current 2026 expansion rate of 18.9% holds steady through the remaining quarters, Cambodia’s total international trade for the full year is on pace to eclipse $76 billion, significantly outperforming the historical baselines of previous fiscal years.
Economists remain highly optimistic that this trade expansion will persist as more factories and enterprises establish operations within the Kingdom. Provided that no major external geopolitical or global economic disruptions manifest, Cambodia’s industrial sector appears well-positioned to steadily fulfill rising domestic consumption requirements while aggressively scaling up its footprint in global markets.
Also read, Cambodia and Vietnam Eye $20 Billion Annual Trade Target as Private Sectors Meet in Hanoi

