International Trade in Goods: January 2026
- In January 2026, Malta registered a trade deficit of €157.3 million.
- During January 2026 a decrease of €166.7 million in imports was recorded, while exports decreased by €2.1 million, over the same month of the previous year.
- In January 2026, Malta’s trade imports from the European Union stood at €334.2 million (62.4 per cent of total imports).
- During January 2026, the main increase in imports was from Spain and the main decrease was from Italy. On the exports side, the main increase was recorded to Germany and the main decrease was to Turkey.
International Trade in Goods: January 2026
International Trade in Goods: January 2026
Total Trade in Goods: January 2026
Data in this news release presents all international trade in goods registered up to the indicated cut-off date. Provisional data recorded a total trade in goods deficit of €157.3 million during January, compared to a deficit of €322.0 million in the corresponding month of 2025. Imports amounted to €535.5 million, while exports totalled €378.2 million, representing decreases in both imports and exports of €166.7 million and €2.1 million, respectively, over the same month of 2025 (Table 1).
The decrease in imports was mainly due to Mineral fuels, lubricants and related materials (€92.9 million), Machinery and transport equipment (€33.7 million) and Food (€14.0 million). On the exports side, the main decrease was registered in Mineral fuels, lubricants and related materials (€64.0 million), partly offset by an increase in Machinery and Transport equipment (€57.9 million) (Table 3).
Goods were imported mainly from the European Union (62.4 per cent) and Asia (25.4 per cent), while exports were mostly directed to the European Union (34.8 per cent) and North and Central America (13.5 per cent). The highest increase in imports was recorded from Spain (€51.8 million), while imports from Italy registered the largest drop (€66.5 million). Exports to Germany registered the highest increase (€20.1 million), while those to Turkey experienced the largest decrease (€21.3 million) (Table 4).
Trade in Goods excluding specific chapters1: January 2026
In January, the deficit of trade in goods excluding specific chapters amounted to €124.3 million, compared to a deficit of €245.8 million recorded in the same month of 2025. Imports stood at €360.7 million and exports at €236.4 million, representing a decrease of 19.6 per cent in imports and an increase of 16.4 per cent in exports, when compared to the corresponding month last year (Table 1).
1 Data excluding Mineral fuels, oils and products (Chapter 27), Aircrafts/spacecrafts and parts thereof (Chapter 88) and Ships, boats and floating structures (Chapter 89). See methodological note 8.
Note: Totals may not add up due to rounding.
Tables
Tables
Methodological Notes
i. The Intrastat Supplementary Declaration that traders in merchandise goods must submit in respect of arrivals (imports) and dispatches (exports) of goods from and to the Member States of the European Union (EU) in compliance with Subsidiary Legislation 406.08, and
ii. The Customs Declarations for imports from and exports to countries that are not Member States of the EU.
14. The data contained in this release is subject to revision. For an updated time-series which includes past data, please refer to the Statistical Indicators for this domain.
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