Loading

🇵🇱 Poland / Japan 🇯🇵

Exports
🇵🇱 → 🇯🇵
$1.12B
Rank 41 / 217
(2023)
Top Product
🇵🇱 → 🇯🇵
$149M
Economic Complexity
🇵🇱
1.09
Rank 24 / 132
(2023)
GDP per Capita
🇵🇱
$22.1k
GDP: $809B
(2023)
Exports
🇯🇵 → 🇵🇱
$5.87B
Rank 24 / 211
(2023)
Top Product
🇯🇵 → 🇵🇱
$1.41B
Cars
(2023)
Economic Complexity
🇯🇵
2.07
Rank 1 / 132
(2023)
GDP per Capita
🇯🇵
$33.8k
GDP: $4.2T
(2023)

About

Overview

In January 2025, Poland exported ¥14.7B and imported ¥39.3B from Japan, resulting in a negative trade balance of ¥24.6B. Between January 2024 and January 2025 the exports of Poland to Japan increased by ¥6.31B (75.1%) from ¥8.4B to ¥14.7B, while imports decreased by ¥2.07B (4.99%) from ¥41.4B to ¥39.3B.

Trade

In January 2025, the top exports of Poland to Japan were Inhalable tobacco/nicotine products (Â¥1.22B), Gas Turbines (Â¥821M), and Engine Parts (Â¥695M).

In January 2025, the main imports of Poland from Japan were Cars (Â¥18.3B), Commodities not elsewhere specified (Â¥3.66B), and Chemical Analysis Instruments (Â¥2.19B).

Growth

In January 2025, the year-on-year growth in Poland's exports to Japan was driven mainly by exports of Inhalable tobacco/nicotine products (Â¥1.15B or 1.54k%), Laboratory Ceramic Ware (Â¥544M or 411%), and Engine Parts (Â¥509M or 275%). Meanwhile, in the same month, the drop in Poland's imports from Japan was mainly attributed to imports of Air Pumps (Â¥-1.04B or -67.4%), Oxometallic or Peroxometallic Acid Salts (Â¥-1.08B or -37.9%), and Cars (Â¥-1.59B or -7.99%).

Latest Trends

Latest Data

In January 2025, Poland exported ¥14.7B to Japan, marking a 75.1% increase from January 2024, when trade amounted to ¥8.4B. Over the past 5 years, trade has grown at an annualized rate of 9.04%.

This section presents data on subnational export and import activities between Poland and Japan. You can interact with the data by selecting a specific date on the line chart, or by choosing a subnational region or product category to explore how trade patterns evolve over time.

*This section presents data reported by Japan.

Subscribe today to OEC PRO and access the latest data
Sign Up
Subscribe today to OEC PRO and access the latest data
Sign Up
Subscribe today to OEC PRO and access the latest data
Sign Up

Historical Data

Bilateral Trade by Products

The charts show the products exported between Poland and Japan. You can review the growth and percentage growth of exports in different periods by changing the options selected in the selectors.

Market Competitiveness

The map shows whether countries import more from Poland or Japan. Each country is colored based on the difference in imports they receive from both countries or the difference in imports growth.

In 2023, countries that imported more from Poland than Japan were Germany ($84B), Czechia ($19.3B), and France ($19.1B).

In the same year, countries that imported more from Japan than Poland included Chinese Taipei ($43B), United States ($143B), and China ($138B).

Comparative Advantage

This chart compares trade between Poland and Japan, considering products traded by both at HS4 level.

During 2023, the top exports from Poland to Japan were Gas Turbines ($149M), Cars ($72.2M), and Motor vehicles; parts and accessories (8701 to 8705) ($48.2M).

On the other hand, the top exports from Japan to Poland were Cars ($1.41B), Oxometallic or Peroxometallic Acid Salts ($735M), and Chemical Analysis Instruments ($285M).

Tariffs

Potential Exports

Potential Exports

Sort by

We estimate the export potential of an economy for each product and destination using an extension of the bilateral relatedness model of Jun et al. (2019). This extended gravity model considers similarities among products and geographies and explains more than 50% of the variance in future trade flows.

Subscribe today to OEC PRO and access the latest data
Sign Up
Subscribe today to OEC PRO and access the latest data
Sign Up

Digital Trade

Digital Trade

Digital products are goods, services, or fees delivered or facilitated through digital means, and involving pure digital goods, automated and encoded services, and digital intermediation fees, but excluding the physical trade they enable. For example, downloading a video game, streaming a movie, or buying an ad in a social media platform are examples of digital trade when these involve a transaction across international borders. Here we use the methodology described in Estimating Digital Product Trade through Corporate Revenue Data to provide estimates for [FIRM]’s digital product exports using two assignments i) headquarters (all revenues are assigned to the parent company), and ii) subsidiaries (the revenues are distributed across subsidiaries based on their reports).

Subscribe today to OEC PRO and access the latest data
Sign Up
Subscribe today to OEC PRO and access the latest data
Sign Up
2025-04-09T07:01:30.643Z
Have questions, comments, or concerns?
Send us an e-mail: support@oec.world
Follow @OECtoday on
Created, Designed, and Developed by:
In collaboration with
We Value Your Privacy
We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience, deliver personalized content, and gather insights to improve our website. You can accept all, reject non-essential cookies, or customize your preferences. To learn more about how we handle your data, please review our privacy policy.