Cote d'Ivoire
Top Trading Ports
| Rank | Port | YTD |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Port of Philadelphia | $679.16 M |
| 2 | Port of Newark | $414.51 M |
| 3 | Port of Houston | $144.28 M |
| 4 | Port of Savannah, GA | $106.57 M |
| 5 | Port of Baltimore, MD | $94.37 M |
| 6 | Port of Chester, PA | $77.94 M |
| 7 | Port of Virginia | $73.59 M |
| 8 | Port of Charleston | $67 M |
| 9 | Port of Oakland, CA | $61.39 M |
| 10 | Port of Beaumont, TX | $57.99 M |
Overall Rank
All trading with Cote D'Ivoire
Total:
Unavailable, check our plans to know more.
: Exports
Total:
Unavailable, check our plans to know more.
: Imports
Total:
Unavailable, check our plans to know more.
Top Exports
| Rank | Commodity | YTD |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Natural gas, LNG | $177.43 M |
| 2 | Acyclic hydrocarbons | $55.07 M |
| 3 | Plastics | $37.89 M |
| 4 | Gasoline, other fuels | $25.21 M |
| 5 | Polymers of vinyl chloride | $15.06 M |
| 6 | Rice | $14.83 M |
| 7 | Passenger vehicles | $12.55 M |
| 8 | Machine tools for forging, bending, stamping | $10.48 M |
| 9 | Soybean oilcake | $9.59 M |
| 10 | Misc. iron, steel tubes, pipes | $9.17 M |
Top Imports
| Rank | Commodity | YTD |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cocoa beans | $669.64 M |
| 2 | Cocoa paste | $451.09 M |
| 3 | Rubber | $191.19 M |
| 4 | Cocoa butter | $108.3 M |
| 5 | Chocolate, food containing cocoa | $44.85 M |
| 6 | Coconuts, brazil nuts, cashew nuts | $33.97 M |
| 7 | Returned exports, without change | $8.56 M |
| 8 | Oil | $3.45 M |
| 9 | Almonds, walnuts, pistachios, etc. | $3.36 M |
| 10 | Lead, unwrought | $3.29 M |
U.S. trade with Cote D'Ivoire rose 78.38 percent through August
Cote D'Ivoire’s trade with the United States increased to $1.99 B through the first eight months of 2025, according to a WorldCity analysis of latest U.S. Census Bureau data. That’s 78.38 percent above its total trade during the same time period last year ago. U.S. exports to Cote D'Ivoire increased 21.58 percent while U.S. imports from Cote D'Ivoire rose 107.49 percent. The U.S. deficit with Cote D'Ivoire was $1.07 B.
Through August, the top five among the nation’s airports, seaports and border crossings were No. 1 Port of Philadelphia; No. 2 Port of Newark; No. 3 Port of Houston; No. 4 Port of Savannah, GA; and No. 5 Port of Baltimore, MD. During the same period the previous year, the top five were No. 1 Port of Philadelphia; No. 2 Port of Newark; No. 3 Port of Houston; No. 4 Port of Savannah, GA and No. 5 Port of Charleston. In the current time period, the top five accounted for 72.13 percent of Cote D'Ivoire’s U.S. trade.
Among those top five:
- Trade with No.1 Port of Philadelphia rose 87.91 percent to $679.16 million.
There were no exports. Imports rose 99.99 percent to $679.16 million. - Trade with No.2 Port of Newark rose 93.47 percent to $414.51 million.
Exports rose 93.94 percent to $4.81 million. Imports rose 93.46 percent to $409.69 million. - Trade with No.3 Port of Houston rose 2.21 percent to $144.28 million.
Exports rose 3.4 percent to $143.05 million. Imports fell 56.37 percent to $1.23 million. - Trade with No.4 Port of Savannah, GA rose 26.1 percent to $106.57 million.
Exports fell 29.36 percent to $19.71 million. Imports rose 53.45 percent to $86.86 million. - Trade with No.5 Port of Baltimore, MD rose 1232 percent to $94.37 million.
Exports rose 166.05 percent to $13.64 million. Imports rose 4031 percent to $80.73 million.
Cote D'Ivoire ranked No. 80 among the United States’ top trade partners through the current period. In the same period one year ago, it ranked No. 92.
Meanwhile, total U.S. trade with the world increased to $3.75 T, up 6.87 percent compared to the same period last year. The nation’s exports climbed 3.86 percent to $1.43 T; imports climbed 8.81 percent to $2.32 T. The nation’s top five countries so far this year, by value, are Mexico; Canada; China; Switzerland and Germany. The overall trade deficit was $892.21 B, up compared to the same period of last year when the deficit was $757.53 B.
The top five U.S. exports to Cote D'Ivoire by value through August were the categories of Natural gas, LNG; Acyclic hydrocarbons; Plastics; Gasoline, other fuels; and Polymers of vinyl chloride, respectively. They accounted for 67.43 percent of total exports to Cote D'Ivoire.
The value of the top five categories of U.S. imports from Cote D'Ivoire –– Cocoa beans; Cocoa paste; Rubber; Cocoa butter; and Chocolate, food containing cocoa –– accounted for 95.49 percent of all inbound shipments.
Looking more closely at U.S. exports to Cote D'Ivoire:
- Natural gas, LNG rose 39.72 percent compared to last year to $177.43 million.
- Acyclic hydrocarbons fell 7.79 percent compared to last year to $55.07 million.
- Plastics rose 35.58 percent compared to last year to $37.89 million.
- Gasoline, other fuels rose 3787 percent compared to last year to $25.21 million.
- Polymers of vinyl chloride rose 1.86 percent compared to last year to $15.06 million.
Looking more closely at U.S. imports from Cote D'Ivoire:
- Cocoa beans rose 111.39 percent compared to last year to $669.64 million.
- Cocoa paste rose 93.02 percent compared to last year to $451.09 million.
- Rubber rose 62.98 percent compared to last year to $191.19 million.
- Cocoa butter rose 2265 percent compared to last year to $108.3 million.
- Chocolate, food containing cocoa rose 152.66 percent compared to last year to $44.85 million.
In the latest annual figures available, Cote D'Ivoire recorded $1.61 B in trade with the United States. Total U.S. exports to Cote D'Ivoire were $ 596.57 M and imports from Cote D'Ivoire were $1.01 B. The U.S. deficit with Cote D'Ivoire was $418.11 M.