Irish exports plunge 35% as pharma shipments fall

Ireland’s goods exports fell by 35% in January 2026 compared with the same month last year, according to the Central Statistics Office.

​In January 2026, unadjusted goods exports were €16.2 billion, compared with €24.9 billion in January 2025, a decrease of €8.7 billion.

​Along with the value of exports, the CSO data found that Ireland’s top exporting partners were the Netherlands, Great Britain and the US.

​In January 2026, the US, the Netherlands and Great Britain accounted for 45.3% of Ireland’s total export goods.

​Exports to the US fell by 71% in January 2026, compared to January last year, with exports of chemicals and pharmaceuticals to the US falling to 81%.

​Exports to Great Britain increased by 47% to €1.8 billion, with a total increase of €567.5 million.

​When it came to imports, the highest value of goods that came into Ireland came from China, the US and Great Britain; with these countries representing 35% of total imports.

​Imports from Great Britain fell by 10.4%, with the largest share of imports being Mineral Fuels, Lubricants, and Machinery & Transport Equipment.

​Imports from the US declined by 33.9%; the main products imported were Chemicals as well as Machinery and Transport Equipment.

​Jane Burmanje of the CSO said: “In January 2026, Ireland’s unadjusted exports of goods decreased by more than a third (€8.7 billion) to €16.2 billion compared with January 2025 (€24.9 billion).

“This fall was largely driven by a decline in the export of pharmaceutical products over this period. A record level of goods (€87.4 billion) was exported in Quarter 1 of 2025; however, exports of goods have declined on average each quarter since Q1 2025.

“Exports of Medical & Pharmaceutical Products more than halved (-61.0%) to €5.9 billion in January 2026 compared with January 2025 (€15.2 billion); nonetheless, pharmaceuticals remain Ireland’s largest export product. More than a third (36.8%) of all goods exported in January 2026 were pharmaceuticals (€5.9 billion).”