Illustration depicting South Korea's record economic surplus with Seoul skyline, export ships, and rising financial charts.
Illustration depicting South Korea's record economic surplus with Seoul skyline, export ships, and rising financial charts.
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South Korea's Record November Current Account Surplus Caps Strong 2025

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South Korea posted a record $12.24 billion current account surplus in November 2025—the largest for any November on record—supported by robust exports during a semiconductor upcycle, the Bank of Korea said Friday. This marked a sharp rise from October's $6.81 billion and continued monthly surpluses since May 2023. Building on the record $709.7 billion annual exports reported late last year, the January data underscores the year's exceptional external accounts performance.

The November surplus was the highest for any November since the Bank of Korea (BOK) began compiling data in 1980. The cumulative surplus for the first 11 months of 2025 reached $101.82 billion, surpassing the prior year's $86.68 billion for the same period and marking the largest ever recorded.

The goods account recorded a $13.31 billion surplus, up sharply from $7.82 billion in October, driven by exports rising 5.5 percent year-on-year to $60.11 billion. Chip exports surged 38.7 percent, while vehicle shipments grew 10.9 percent. Imports edged down 0.7 percent to $46.8 billion.

The services account showed a $2.73 billion deficit, narrowed from October's $3.75 billion, due to strong overseas travel demand. The primary income account posted a $1.83 billion surplus, fueled by dividend earnings from abroad. The secondary income account had a $180 million deficit.

In the financial account, net assets increased by $8.27 billion from October. Overseas direct investment by Korean residents rose $4.09 billion, while foreign direct investment inflows grew $1.76 billion, resulting in a net $2.33 billion rise.

BOK official Song Jae-chang projected the full-year 2025 current account surplus at $115 billion—the largest on record, topping 2015's $105.12 billion—noting the marked trade surplus expansion in December.

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Seoul skyline at night celebrating South Korea's record $23.19 billion current account surplus from semiconductors and exports.
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South Korea posts largest-ever current account surplus in February

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South Korea recorded its largest-ever monthly current account surplus of $23.19 billion in February, according to Bank of Korea data. The figure was driven by a semiconductor upcycle and robust exports. It sharply exceeded January's $13.26 billion and surpassed the previous record of $18.7 billion set in December 2025.

The Bank of Korea reported that South Korea posted its largest-ever monthly current account surplus of $37.33 billion in March, driven by strong semiconductor exports.

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South Korea's exports exceeded $85.89 billion in April, topping $80 billion for the second consecutive month. The figure jumped 48 percent from a year earlier, driven by robust semiconductor shipments. The trade surplus reached $23.77 billion, marking the second straight month above $20 billion.

South Korea's real GDP jumped 1.7 percent in Q1 2026 from the prior quarter—the strongest growth in 5½ years—despite Middle East tensions, easily topping the Bank of Korea's 0.9 percent forecast on robust exports and steady domestic demand. Part of the rebound following 2025's modest 1% annual expansion (see prior article in series).

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