Exports of U.S. pork bounced back in June, finishing the first half of 2025 on a high note, according to data released by USDA and compiled by the U.S. Meat Export Federation (USMEF). Beef export volume was the lowest in five years, due in part to China’s failure to renew registrations for the vast majority of U.S. plants.
June pork highlights include value surge for Mexico, variety meat rebound
June pork exports totaled 239,304 metric tons (mt), up 7% from a year ago, while value increased 3.5% to $682.6 million. Export value to Mexico was the second highest on record at nearly $250 million, with shipments to Mexico, Central America and Colombia remaining on a record pace.
June exports also increased year-over-year to the Caribbean and Vietnam. Pork variety meat exports increased 10% from a year ago, due in part to a rebound in shipments to China.
For the first half of the year, pork exports were down 4% from last year’s record pace at 1.46 million mt. Export value was $4.11 billion, down 3.5% from a year ago but still the third highest first-half total on record.