Euro Remains Top Export Currency for German Goods to Non‑EU Countries in 2025

Euro Remains Top Export Currency for German Goods to Non‑EU Countries in 2025

In 2025 the euro was the most common currency for German exports outside the EU, covering 54.7 % of all export transactions. The United States dollar followed with 26.4 %, the pound sterling 4.8 %, the Chinese renminbi 2.7 %, and the Swiss franc 2.4 %; the remaining 8.9 % were paid in other currencies.

On the import side the U.S. dollar dominated, accounting for 45.2 % of all imports from non‑EU partners. The euro made up 43.8 %, the renminbi 3.6 %, the Swiss franc 2.8 %, and the pound sterling 1.7 %; only 2.9 % used other currencies.

Country‑specific patterns show greater variation.

” “United States” – exports to the U.S. were priced 68.6 % in dollars and 30.6 % in euros, with a mere 0.8 % in other currencies; imports from the U.S. were paid 78.4 % in dollars, 20 % in euros, and 1.7 % in other currencies.
” “China” – exports to China were largely settled in euros (61 %), followed by 23 % in renminbi and 15.1 % in dollars, with only 0.9 % in other currencies; imports from China were largely in dollars (50.8 %), then euros (31.1 %), renminbi (16.7 %), and 1.4 % in other currencies.
” “United Kingdom” – German exports appeared 48.5 % in euros, 8.1 % in dollars, and 41.4 % in pounds, with 2 % in other currencies; imports from the U.K. were 50.3 % in euros, 25.9 % in dollars, 23.2 % in pounds, and 0.6 % in other currencies.
” “Switzerland” – exports were 71 % in euros, 22 % in Swiss francs, 4.4 % in dollars, and 2.6 % in other currencies; imports from Switzerland were mainly in euros (67 %), followed by Swiss francs (23.4 %) and dollars only 6.6 %, with 3.1 % in other currencies.