Uzbekistan–United States trade: emerging upward dynamics

Uzbekistan–United States trade: emerging upward dynamics

Uzbekistan’s trade relations with the United States have shown steady expansion over the past decade. In 2024, Uzbekistan exported $431 million worth of goods to the U.S. – a tenfold increase compared to 2014 ($42.4 million). The share of the U.S. in Uzbekistan’s total exports rose from 0.3% in 2014 to 1.6% in 2024, reflecting gradual diversification toward high-value markets.

Export structure

Uzbekistan’s exports to the United States remain highly concentrated in services (HS 99), which accounted for around $274 million (63.6%) of total exports in 2024. However, a noticeable shift has taken place in recent years. Exports of mineral fuels and oils (HS 27) surged from only $287 thousand in 2020 to over $117 million in 2024, elevating energy products to the second-largest export group. This trend highlights growing U.S. demand for refined energy products and by-products from Uzbekistan.

Beyond traditional sectors, several new export categories have emerged:

Aluminium and articles thereof (HS 76) rose to $11.4 million in 2024, compared to almost zero in 2020;

Aircraft and spacecraft parts (HS 88) expanded to $10.7 million;

Agricultural exports such as edible vegetables (HS 07) and coffee, tea, and spices (HS 09) jointly exceeded $3.5 million, reflecting early diversification into agro-based trade.

Overall, Uzbekistan’s exports to the United States are becoming broader in scope, gradually moving from raw materials toward industrial and agricultural goods, although the dominance of service exports persists.

 

2-digit HS Code Product label 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
99 Services 25378 24144 31945 29843 19890 39774 108056 197042 273907
27 Mineral fuels, mineral oils and products of their distillation; bituminous substances; mineral 477 242 112 949 287 2383 906 24076 117281
74 Copper and articles thereof 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 22217 677
28 Inorganic chemicals; organic or inorganic compounds of precious metals, of rare-earth metals 19362 0 0 15 35 5 57 12 122
88 Aircraft, spacecraft, and parts thereof 9 1 1 219 0 4209 605 0 10657
84 Nuclear reactors, boilers, machinery and mechanical appliances; parts thereof 724 4313 910 811 367 1596 5136 367 552
07 Edible vegetables and certain roots and tubers 459 840 935 1354 2065 1970 2253 1949 1894
09 Coffee, tea, maté and spices 868 909 985 1419 2343 2651 1289 1176 1661
76 Aluminium and articles thereof 0 18 0 169 123 126 496 349 11444
71 Natural or cultured pearls, precious or semi-precious stones, precious metals, metals clad 0 1 0 0 0 2618 688 44 5726
87 Vehicles other than railway or tramway rolling stock, and parts and accessories thereof 4348 21 0 16 0 38 36 1 1
61 Articles of apparel and clothing accessories, knitted or crocheted 17 260 649 98 59 430 455 1122 886
08 Edible fruit and nuts; peel of citrus fruit or melons 73 227 418 204 150 459 437 739 942
85 Electrical machinery and equipment and parts thereof; sound recorders and reproducers, television 52 167 0 32 48 1065 128 815 425
39 Plastics and articles thereof 119 192 164 283 244 266 323 211 355

Table 1. Uzbekistan’s top 15 export products to the U.S., 2016–2024 (HS 2-digit level, thousand USD)

Source: National Statistics Committee of Uzbekistan

 

Import structure

In 2024, imports from the United States totaled $594 million, or 1.5% of Uzbekistan’s total imports. Although imports from the U.S. remain larger than exports, the gap is narrowing, reflecting Uzbekistan’s growing shipments of services, mineral fuels, aluminium, and aircraft components. The structure of imports reflects the technological depth of U.S. supply:

Machinery and mechanical appliances (HS 84) remain the largest category at $125 million;

Aircraft and parts (HS 88) reached $94 million;

Vehicles and transport equipment (HS 87) totaled $59 million, linked to logistics and infrastructure expansion;

Pharmaceuticals (HS 30) accounted for $20 million, maintaining steady demand;

Electrical machinery (HS 85) and precision instruments (HS 90) together exceeded $73 million, supporting modernization of industry and laboratories.

Other categories such as plastics (HS 39), rubber (HS 40), and man-made filaments (HS 54) also show steady inflows, expanding industrial linkages with U.S. suppliers.

 

2-digit HS Code Product label 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
88 Aircraft, spacecraft, and parts thereof 216776 0 132884 271198 0 213 28 40429 93895
99 Services 20784 34161 63976 69166 36853 83086 95777 111929 155175
84 Nuclear reactors, boilers, machinery and mechanical appliances; parts thereof 81224 32364 36977 67603 67058 66025 72734 103972 124890
30 Pharmaceutical products 38173 50718 68693 68348 20467 41681 106845 11681 20109
87 Vehicles other than railway or tramway rolling stock, and parts and accessories thereof 3546 5207 6586 20366 41977 105946 33857 147947 59356
85 Electrical machinery and equipment and parts thereof; sound recorders and reproducers, television 15506 14202 6220 7915 6863 15160 9260 13088 45821
90 Optical, photographic, cinematographic, measuring, checking, precision, medical or surgical 12753 6727 4736 8045 9300 8805 10861 22550 27338
40 Rubber and articles thereof 2390 6426 31575 19816 2018 1802 1279 2668 3747
54 Man-made filaments; strip and the like of man-made textile materials 747 3732 6488 6365 4328 5856 5312 7153 6129
39 Plastics and articles thereof 717 9938 4401 2761 3684 4022 2879 5823 4421
38 Miscellaneous chemical products 1840 1322 1329 1031 20981 1458 2022 1810 4494
21 Miscellaneous edible preparations 407 376 397 532 2100 6253 6332 7206 6645
73 Articles of iron or steel 1111 765 1203 9107 3131 1389 2841 5142 5139
02 Meat and edible meat offal 772 597 797 750 3196 7421 5601 3835 4905
24 Tobacco and manufactured tobacco substitutes; products, whether or not containing nicotine, 2234 1466 1420 1498 1886 1615 1187 2898 3056

Table 2. Uzbekistan’s top 15 import products from the U.S., 2016–2024 (HS 2-digit level, thousand USD)

Source: National Statistics Committee of Uzbekistan

Trends and outlook

Overall bilateral trade turnover surpassed $1 billion in 2024, marking the highest level on record. Between 2021 and 2024, Uzbekistan’s exports to the U.S. grew on average by 98% per year, while imports rose by 26%, indicating an improving trade balance and a shift toward more diversified export patterns.

The United States remains a strategic trade and investment partner for Uzbekistan—providing not only high-value goods but also technological know-how and capital essential for industrial upgrading.

Future opportunities lie in expanding value-added manufacturing, digital services, and joint innovation projects, consistent with the “Uzbekistan–2030” Strategy.

In parallel with the steady growth of bilateral trade, Uzbekistan has also achieved a key institutional milestone in its integration into the global trading system. In December 2024, Uzbekistan and the United States Trade Representative (USTR) officially announced the completion of bilateral market access negotiations on goods and services within the framework of Uzbekistan’s accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO)[1].

Impact of new U.S. tariff policy

In early 2025, the United States introduced a new trade policy imposing a 10% baseline tariff on imports from all non-exempt countries, with higher rates for selected partners. For Uzbekistan, which falls under the baseline rate, the average U.S. tariff rose sharply—from 3.8% in 2024 to 18.1% in 2025. This escalation, especially in fuels and mining (29.5%) and manufacturing (14.5%), tightens market access for Uzbek exporters and could reduce competitiveness of low-margin products. Nonetheless, the tariff pattern also presents selective opportunities: moderate duties on processed foods, textiles, and industrial intermediates provide niches that could be expanded through improved certification, logistics, and trade facilitation. Regionally, Uzbekistan now occupies a middle position, facing higher tariffs than Kazakhstan but much lower than large Asian exporters like China and India, offering potential to serve as a tariff-neutral hub for re-export and light manufacturing aimed at the U.S. market. These shifts have important implications for Uzbekistan’s market positioning and sectoral competitiveness.

Compared with many CIS and Central Asian peers, Uzbekistan’s tariff exposure is moderate and strategically manageable.

Sector Pre-January 2025 tariffs Current tariffs
Manufacturing 4.5% 14.5%
Agriculture 3.0% 13.0%
Fuels & mining 5.4% 29.5%

Table 3: Trade-weighted average U.S. tariffs applied to imports from Uzbekistan, before and after early

  1. Source: UNCTAD Tariff Dashboard.

 

Although Uzbekistan’s exposure remains moderate by regional standards, sustained export growth will depend on the capacity to offset tariff-related cost pressures through productivity and quality improvements.

The new tariff regime poses both challenges and opportunities: while it may constrain low-processed exports, it incentivizes a shift toward higher-value manufacturing and agriculture. To capitalize on this asymmetry, Uzbekistan should strengthen support for sectors with moderate U.S. tariffs. With proactive trade and investment policies, Uzbekistan can turn external tariff pressures into an opportunity to diversify exports and attract export-oriented production.

Strengthening trade ties with the United States remains an important strategic goal for Uzbekistan’s long-term diversification agenda. The country’s improving export capacity, combined with its moderate exposure under the new U.S. tariff regime, provides a unique opportunity to reposition itself as a competitive, tariff-neutral hub for manufacturing and re-export within the region. Achieving this will require sustained institutional coordination, improved logistics and certification frameworks, and proactive engagement in regional and global trade partnerships.

 

BABADJANOV MUHAMMAD

Head of Department at Institute for Macroeconomic and Regional Studies under the Cabinet of Ministers of the Republic of Uzbekistan

 

[1]https://ustr.gov/about-us/policy-offices/press-office/press-releases/2024/december/statement-ambassador-katherine-tai-uzbekistans-work-toward-accession-world-trade-organization