Maldives
Import & Export Trade DataA highly import-dependent $4B+ trade economy driven almost entirely by the needs of global luxury hospitality. From massive inbound shipments of petroleum, high-end foods, and resort infrastructure to outbound shipments of world-renowned premium tuna — access the shipment-level reality of the Maldivian maritime supply chain.
The Resort Supply Chain
The Maldives imports nearly everything required to sustain its world-class luxury resorts. From high-end European food and beverages to massive power generators and specialized resort construction materials, this data is the ultimate lead-generation tool for B2B hospitality suppliers.
Structural Trade Deficit
Due to the lack of domestic manufacturing and raw materials, the Maldives runs a massive structural trade deficit, importing roughly nine times more than it exports. This absolute dependency on foreign goods creates a permanent, high-volume inbound market.
Premium Tuna & Marine Goods
Domestic exports are almost entirely dominated by the ocean. High-grade frozen skipjack and yellowfin tuna are exported in massive volumes to Thailand for canning, while fresh catch is flown directly into premium markets in the EU and Japan.
Asian proximity heavily dictates the flow of goods. China, India, and the UAE dominate imports (consumer goods and fuels), while Thailand remains the undeniable anchor for Maldivian fish exports.
The Maldivian trade landscape is exceptionally clear-cut: fuel, food, and construction items flow in to support resorts, while premium marine commodities flow out to global markets.
The lifeblood of the archipelago. Diesel for island generators, aviation fuel for seaplanes and international jets, and petrol for marine transport. Primarily sourced from Oman and the UAE.
Heavy machinery, diesel generators, water desalination plants, and commercial air conditioning units essential for resort operations and infrastructure development.
Insulated cables, telecommunications hardware, and consumer electronics needed to power, connect, and furnish modern resorts and the capital city of Malé.
Structural steel, construction rebar, and cement imported extensively from India, Sri Lanka, and China for ongoing land reclamation and luxury hotel builds.
A highly specialized category for the Maldives, consisting of seaplanes (Twin Otters), helicopter parts from the US/Canada, and luxury yachts/speedboats for inter-island transport.
High-end cuts of meat, dairy, fresh vegetables, and alcoholic beverages flown in globally to meet the exacting culinary standards of the international tourism industry.
The absolute core of Maldivian merchandise exports. Frozen skipjack and yellowfin tuna, highly prized for sustainable pole-and-line catching methods, are shipped en masse to Thailand for canning.
Value-added tuna products, including canned tuna and pre-cooked fish loins, exported largely to European supermarkets (UK, Germany, France) under sustainable fishing certifications.
Premium fresh-caught tuna and reef fish fillets flown directly from Malé to high-end sushi markets and restaurants in Japan, the United States, and Western Europe.
Traditional "Maldive Fish" (cured, dried, and smoked tuna) exported almost exclusively to neighboring Sri Lanka and India, where it is a staple culinary ingredient.
An interesting non-marine export. Copper scrap recovered from old resort generators, marine engines, and obsolete cables, exported to India and Southeast Asia for recycling.
Flours, meals, and pellets made from fish processing byproducts, exported as high-protein animal and aquaculture feed to Sri Lanka and regional agricultural markets.
Sourced directly from details filled by importers and exporters at the time of import/export, provide a highly granular look at the specialized goods flowing into one of the world's most unique geographies.
Acquire datasets for the Maldivian market, filtered precisely by product category, hospitality industry sector, or partner country.
Analyze inbound resort supply chains · Map global food and fuel suppliers · Track construction material influx.
Analyze the massive global tuna trade · Destination mapping for frozen and fresh marine products.
The Maldives is a highly concentrated, incredibly lucrative market. Understanding what lands in Malé is the key to tapping into the multi-billion dollar Indian Ocean tourism supply chain.
With dozens of new luxury islands developing constantly, Maldives is a voracious consumer of high-end architectural materials, premium food, and luxury goods. Import data allows foreign suppliers to see exactly which local hospitality conglomerates are buying what, and from whom.
Maldivian pole-and-line caught tuna commands a premium in global markets. Tracking export data provides commodities traders and European supermarket buyers with direct links to sustainable suppliers, shipment volumes, and seasonal catch fluctuations.
Every single island, resort, and boat in the Maldives relies on imported petroleum. Tracking inbound diesel and aviation fuel shipments is critical for energy suppliers looking to bid on massive government and private sector fuel tenders.
The Maldives operates the world's largest seaplane fleet and thousands of speedboats. Monitoring the import of marine engines, Twin Otter aircraft parts, and maritime tech provides aerospace and marine manufacturers direct sales leads.
An economy entirely dependent on imports is an economy completely transparent through data. If a product is consumed in the Maldives, it crossed a border to get there. Our data gives you exact visibility into that $4B+ transactional reality.
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