
Switzerland
Global Trade Profile • Rank #18 Exporter
$391.61B
Total Exports (2023)
$380.35B
Total Imports (2023)
$11.26B
Trade Surplus
#18
Export Ranking
Trade Flow Visualization
Interactive map showing Switzerland's top trading partners. Green lines represent exports, red lines represent imports.
#18
Export Rank
$391.61B
Total Exports
$380.35B
Total Imports
+$11.26B
Trade Balance
25
Trade Partners
🌍 Top Export Destinations
Germany
China
USA
Italy
France
Türkiye
India
China, Hong Kong SAR
United Kingdom
SloveniaTop Export Products
📥 Top Import Sources
Germany
USA
Italy
France
China
Slovenia
Austria
United Arab Emirates
Spain
UzbekistanTop Import Products
📈 Historical Trade Trends (1995-2023)
29 Years
Data Coverage
29
Data Points
📈
Trend Direction
Switzerland Trade Analysis 2023
📊 Overview
Switzerland stands as the world's #18 largest exporter and #18 largest importer, demonstrating significant global trade influence.
The trade profile reveals a robust surplus of 11.26 billion, indicating strong export competitiveness.
The country maintains active trading relationships with 20 major partners, creating a highly diversified trade network.
Monthly trade flows average $64.33B, generating continuous economic activity across logistics, finance, and trade services.
🚢 Export Markets
Export Market Concentration
Export concentration shows Germany as the dominant market at 13.4%. The top three markets control 36.5% of exports.
Regional patterns reveal European market focus. Secondary markets (Türkiye, India, China, Hong Kong SAR) provide $76.69B in additional trade.
📦 Import Sources
Import Source Concentration
Switzerland relies heavily on Germany for imports (18.4%),maintaining balanced sourcing.
Energy suppliers including United Arab Emirates (10.52B) collectively provide 10.52 billion or 2.8% of imports, highlighting the economy's dependence on imported energy resources.
Manufacturing inputs come primarily from China, reflecting deep integration into Asian production networks. China's dominant position at 19.28 billion encompasses electronics components, textiles, machinery parts, and consumer goods, creating both efficiency benefits and concentration risks.
The USA provides 31.81 billion (8.4%) in imports, concentrated in agricultural products, aircraft, pharmaceuticals, and advanced technology.The top 10 import sources account for 59.7% of total imports, with the remaining 40% distributed among 10 other suppliers.
Regional sourcing patterns reveal diversified global sourcing. European suppliers including Germany (70.12B), Italy (30.64B), France (21.89B) focus on luxury goods, machinery, and specialized chemicals.
Supply chain resilience strategies increasingly emphasize "China Plus One" approaches, with emerging as alternative manufacturing bases. The geographic proximity of major suppliers balances efficiency with risk diversification.
📦 Product Composition
🚀 Export Products
Top Export Products
Switzerland's export economy centers on diversified industrial production, with the leading export being gold, non-monetary, unwrought (but not powder)at $94.34 billion, accounting for 24.1% of total exports.
The automotive sector's dominance is evident in the export portfolio, with . This automotive specialization reflects decades of manufacturing excellence, continuous innovation in fuel efficiency and hybrid technology, and established global brand recognition.
The transition to electric and hybrid vehicles is captured in export data, with 3 categories specifically related to alternative propulsion systems, totaling $15.71B.
Beyond automotive, Switzerland maintains strong positions in specialized equipment,, and Metals, Medicaments, Blood, human or animal, antisera, other blood fractions and immunological products.
The top 20 export products collectively account for 63.9% of total exports, revealing moderate concentration with room for further diversification.
🛒 Import Products
Top Import Products
Import requirements center on gold, non-monetary, unwrought (but not powder) at 97.42 billion (25.6%), indicating technology and machinery requirements.
Beyond energy, critical imports include gold, non-monetary, unwrought (but not p... (97.42B, 25.6%), consisting of mixed or unmixed products ... (34.62B, 9.1%), gold, semi-manufactured (9.53B, 2.5%), of precious metal (excluding silver) whe... (9.36B, 2.5%), immunological products, put up in measur... (7.99B, 2.1%).Electronic components and devices total 1.92 billion (0.5% of imports), supporting domestic manufacturing and assembly operations. Pharmaceutical products represent 53.70 billion (14.1%), reflecting healthcare sector demands.
The import product mix reveals structural characteristics of Switzerland's economy: heavy reliance on imported energy despite industrial advancement, and sophisticated consumption patterns.
The ratio of raw materials to finished goods in imports (9 : 11among top 20 products) indicates balanced import composition. Import substitution potential exists in technology and chemicals sectors through targeted industrial policies and investment.
Product diversification metrics reveal focused product specializationwith implications for economic resilience and growth potential. The technology ladder progression from 13 primary products to 4 high-tech goods indicates the economy's structural transformation and industrial upgrading trajectory.
Value addition opportunities exist in transitioning from raw material exports to processed goods, from components to finished products, and from standard to customized offerings. The product space connectivity, measuring relatedness between current exports and potential new products, suggests need for capability building to enter new product categories.
⚖️ Trade Balance Dynamics
| Partner | Exports | Imports | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Germany | $52.35B | $70.12B | $-17.77B |
| USA | $44.62B | $31.81B | +$12.81B |
| China | $45.85B | $19.28B | +$26.57B |
| Italy | $20.03B | $30.64B | $-10.62B |
| France | $18.75B | $21.89B | $-3.14B |
Export-to-import ratio of 1.030 means exports cover 103.0% of import costs.
🔗 Key Relationships
Major Trading Partners
| Partner | Exports | Imports | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Germany | $52.35B | $70.12B | $-17.77B |
| USA | $44.62B | $31.81B | +$12.81B |
| China | $45.85B | $19.28B | +$26.57B |
| Italy | $20.03B | $30.64B | $-10.62B |
| France | $18.75B | $21.89B | $-3.14B |
| Slovenia | $11.27B | $14.08B | $-2.80B |
| Austria | $11.13B | $10.89B | +$238.81M |
| United Kingdom | $14.20B | $7.43B | +$6.77B |
| Total | $218.20B | $206.14B | +$12.06B |
The Switzerland-Germany relationship leads at 122.47 billion in bilateral trade.View detailed analysis →
Additional major partnerships include China (65.13B total trade), Italy (50.67B total trade), France (40.64B total trade). Regional integration through Asian supply chains facilitates technology transfer, market access, and production efficiency. The diversity of trading relationships—466.79B across top 10 partners—provides resilience against bilateral tensions and regional disruptions.
🏆 Competitive Position
Competitive Advantage
Global rankings position Switzerland as the #18 exporter worldwide,within the major trading nations. The country's share of global exports at approximately 3.916%provides substantial market influence and pricing power.
Export sophistication, measured by the dominance of technology-intensive products, indicates advanced industrial capabilities. The revealed comparative advantage (RCA) index shows strongest competitiveness in sectors where Switzerland's global market share exceeds its overall trade share by factors of 2 or more.
Competitive advantages emerge in sectors where export concentration exceeds import share, particularly ingold, non-monetary, unwro, consisting of mixed or un, immunological products, p. The revealed comparative advantage is strongest in product categories representing41.4% of exports. Market positioning against regional competitors shows leadership in key product segments.
Trade complementarity with major partners suggests regional production network participation. The export quality ladder, comparing unit values to world averages, indicates premium positioning in many categories.
Competitive dynamics are shaped by factor endowments including advanced technology and skilled labor, infrastructure quality, and business environment. The export survival rate, measuring the persistence of export relationships over time, suggests need for relationship strengthening.
Innovation capacity, reflected in the technology content of exports and R&D intensity, determines long-term competitiveness trajectories. The competitive threat from emerging exporters in similar product categories requires continuous upgrading and differentiation strategies to maintain market position. Regional integration through trade agreements provides preferential access to0 markets, creating competitive advantages over non-member competitors.
🎯 Strategic Outlook
Strategic Priority
The trade profile presents both opportunities and challenges for economic development strategy. Key strengths include consistent trade surpluses supporting macroeconomic stability,diversified market access reducing concentration risk, and competitive positions in high-value manufacturing.
Vulnerabilities include product concentration in cyclical sectors. The intersection of these factors creates a complex strategic landscape requiring careful navigation to maximize opportunities while mitigating risks.
Strategic priorities should focus on market diversification and value chain upgrading to enhance trade competitiveness. Opportunities exist in expanding trade with Austria, United Arab Emirates, Japan, developing new product capabilities in adjacent product categories, and strengthening regional integration through new partnership frameworks.
The digital transformation of trade, including e-commerce, digital services, and blockchain-based trade finance, offers new avenues for market access and efficiency gains. Green trade opportunities in renewable energy, sustainable products, and carbon markets represent growing segments aligned with global sustainability goals.
The evolving global trade environment, characterized by technological disruption, geopolitical realignment, and sustainability imperatives, will fundamentally reshape Switzerland's trade prospects. Success requires balanced policies addressing both maintaining export competitiveness while managing currency appreciation pressures.
Investment in infrastructure, education, and innovation ecosystems will determine the ability to climb value chains and capture larger shares of global value addition. The resilience agenda, emphasizing supply chain robustness, strategic autonomy in critical sectors, and economic security considerations, must be balanced with efficiency and openness principles.
As global trade patterns continue evolving, Switzerland's position as the world's #18 exporter provides a platform for continued growth, requiring adaptive strategies, institutional strengthening, and sustained commitment to competitiveness enhancement in an increasingly complex and interconnected global economy.
Data Notes
Data from CEPII BACI database, harmonized using UN Comtrade methodology. All values in current USD at 2023 exchange rates. Trade statistics cover merchandise goods only, excluding services. Mirror statistics reconciliation applied for data consistency. 2024 data available January 2026. HS6 product classification follows 2017 revision.
Data source: CEPII BACI | Last updated: January 2025 | Next update: January 2026