By Faith Parum
Between January and April of this year, the United States imported $78.2 billion worth of agricultural products, the highest value on record. Over the same period, U.S. agricultural exports totaled just $58.5 billion, resulting in a record-setting agricultural trade deficit of nearly $20 billion in just the first four months. However, U.S. wheat exports are projected to reach their highest level in five years during the 2025/26 marketing year. This rebound underscores the importance of foreign market access for wheat farm profitability, the potential for growth under today’s global supply conditions, and the ongoing risks from price pressure, weather volatility and unresolved trade barriers.
Agriculture Trade Balance
While the overall agricultural sector has slipped into a widening trade deficit, wheat remains one of the few U.S. commodities that consistently generates a trade surplus. U.S. wheat exports totaled 826 million bushels in 2024/25 and USDA’s August World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) projects 850 million to 875 million bushels in 2025/26.