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Kenya’s imports growth outpaces exports growth again in 2025.

Christine Akinyi by Christine Akinyi
February 20, 2026
in Business
Reading Time: 2 mins read

Kenya’s trade position experienced a notable reversal in 2025 as the country’s merchandise trade deficit widened after nearly two years of contraction, signaling persistent structural imbalances in its external sector. According to data from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics, the gap between imports and exports expanded to KES 1.7 tn in 2025, up from KES 1.6 tn in 2024. This marked the first widening of the deficit since 2022 and underscored the continued mismatch between the country’s foreign purchases and export earnings. The shift comes at a time when import growth significantly outpaced export performance, exposing underlying weaknesses in Kenya’s trade competitiveness.

The deterioration was largely driven by a surge in imports as firms increased overseas purchases to meet rising domestic demand and fulfill expanding order books. Higher inflows of raw materials, intermediate goods, machinery, electronics and other manufactured products enabled businesses to maintain inventory levels and improve delivery timelines toward the end of 2025. While this supported short-term economic activity, the pace of inward shipments far exceeded growth in outbound trade. Exports remained constrained by subdued global commodity prices and limited output volumes in key agricultural segments such as tea, flowers and vegetables, which traditionally anchor Kenya’s export basket.

Trade flows from major partners further amplified the imbalance. Imports from China, Kenya’s largest source of imported goods, rose by more than KES 93.0 bn to KES 671.3 bn in 2025. Chinese products ranging from construction inputs and industrial machinery to consumer electronics continued to meet strong demand from local manufacturers, contractors and households. However, the persistent strength in imports from key suppliers was not matched by a commensurate rise in export receipts, deepening bilateral trade gaps and reinforcing Kenya’s dependency on foreign manufactured goods.

On the export side, performance was weighed down by multiple external and structural challenges. Revenues from core agricultural commodities faced headwinds from soft global demand and price pressures in international markets. In horticulture, earnings were further affected by volatile exchange rates, rising certification requirements and logistical bottlenecks that increased production costs and eroded price competitiveness. These factors combined to limit export growth and reverse some of the incremental gains recorded in earlier years.

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The widening trade deficit carries important macroeconomic implications. A larger imbalance between imports and exports can exert pressure on foreign exchange reserves and the broader balance of payments, potentially influencing currency stability and raising the cost of servicing external obligations. It also highlights the urgency of policy reforms aimed at expanding value-added manufacturing, diversifying export markets and strengthening competitiveness. As Kenya looks ahead to 2026, narrowing the trade gap will be central to enhancing economic resilience and supporting sustainable, export-driven growth.

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Christine Akinyi

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