Updated
Updated · Montgomery Advertiser · Jul 16
Alabama Trade Gap Widens to $1.41 Billion as Imports Jump 20% After 2025 Tariffs
Updated
Updated · Montgomery Advertiser · Jul 16

Alabama Trade Gap Widens to $1.41 Billion as Imports Jump 20% After 2025 Tariffs

3 articles · Updated · Montgomery Advertiser · Jul 16

Summary

  • $1.41 billion — Alabama’s April 2026 trade gap widened as imports reached $3.32 billion and exports slipped to $1.91 billion, more than a year after Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs took effect.
  • Exports fell nearly 6% from a year earlier while imports rose more than 20%, a $119 million drop in outbound goods and a $568 million increase in inbound shipments.
  • Automobiles and aerospace — two pillars of the state’s manufacturing base — drove the export weakness, with car exports down $187 million and aircraft exports down $39 million.
  • Imported components kept rising instead: electric battery imports nearly tripled, spark-ignition engine imports more than doubled, and vehicle parts remained Alabama’s largest import category.
  • Mexico stayed Alabama’s top trading partner, taking $384 million of exports and supplying $620 million of imports, underscoring how dependent the state remains on cross-border supply chains.

Insights

As Chinese EV makers build plants in Mexico, what is the future for Alabama's auto industry?
Can the U.S. auto industry win the global EV race amid its own restrictive trade policies?