Malaysia Food Trade Intelligence
Malaysia Food Trade Statistics Dashboard
Explore Malaysia’s food trade statistics, including food exports, food imports, total food trade, trade balance, and monthly food trade trends using official Malaysia open data.
Latest Malaysia Food Trade Overview: March 2026
The figures below show Malaysia’s latest available monthly trade values for Standard International Trade Classification (SITC) Section 0, Food and Live Animals.
Malaysia Food Trade Trend
The cards below show the latest available monthly food exports, imports, and trade balance without requiring horizontal scrolling.
Mar 2026
Feb 2026
Jan 2026
Dec 2025
Nov 2025
Oct 2025
Sep 2025
Aug 2025
Jul 2025
Jun 2025
May 2025
Apr 2025
Understanding Malaysia Food Trade Statistics
Malaysia’s food industry forms an important part of the national economy and international trade sector. Every year, Malaysia exports and imports food products, agricultural commodities, livestock products, seafood, processed foods, beverages, ingredients, and related agricultural goods. Food trade statistics provide valuable insight into market demand, consumer trends, food security, agricultural production, and international supply chain activity.
The Malaysia Food Trade Statistics Dashboard above uses official government data to provide a current overview of Malaysia’s food exports, food imports, total food trade, and food trade balance. The information is useful for manufacturers, exporters, importers, wholesalers, distributors, logistics providers, agricultural businesses, researchers, investors, and policymakers seeking reliable trade intelligence.
SITC stands for Standard International Trade Classification. It is a system developed by the United Nations to classify traded goods into broad categories so that countries can compare trade statistics consistently.
Why Food Trade Statistics Matter
Food trade data is an important indicator because food products are essential goods consumed by households and businesses every day. Changes in food imports and exports may reflect shifts in consumer demand, agricultural production, commodity prices, exchange rates, international trade conditions, and supply chain developments.
For businesses involved in bulk liquid logistics, food trade activity is especially relevant because products such as edible oils, liquid food ingredients, syrups, fruit concentrates, and food-grade liquids may require specialized transportation systems including flexitanks and food-grade liners.
Malaysia’s Role in Regional Food Trade
Malaysia occupies a strategic position within Southeast Asia and participates actively in regional and global food supply chains. The country imports food products and agricultural raw materials to support domestic consumption and manufacturing while exporting processed food products, agricultural commodities, seafood products, palm-based products, and food ingredients to international markets.
Food Trade and Supply Chain Planning
Supply chain professionals use food trade statistics to support procurement planning, inventory management, transportation forecasting, warehousing decisions, and supplier evaluation. Understanding import and export trends helps businesses anticipate changes in demand and prepare for fluctuations in market conditions.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are food trade statistics?
Food trade statistics measure the value of food products and related agricultural goods exported from and imported into Malaysia during a specified reporting period.
How often is Malaysia food trade data updated?
The official statistics are generally updated monthly by the Department of Statistics Malaysia. Recent figures may be provisional and subject to revision.
Why are food trade statistics important?
Food trade data helps businesses, researchers, and policymakers understand market trends, supply chain activity, food demand, agricultural performance, and international trade developments.
Who uses food trade statistics?
Food manufacturers, exporters, importers, distributors, logistics providers, researchers, economists, investors, government agencies, and supply chain professionals commonly use food trade statistics.
