Vietnam's aquatic exports rise 12.8% in first half of 2026

The performance was boosted by an impressive June, when overseas shipments approximated 1.1 billion USD, up 21% from the same month last year.

Workers process shrimp for export in the southernmost province of Ca Mau. (Photo: VNA)
Workers process shrimp for export in the southernmost province of Ca Mau. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnam's aquatic exports maintained solid momentum in the first half of 2026, with turnover rising 12.8% year-on-year to nearly 5.8 billion USD, according to the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP).

The performance was boosted by an impressive June, when overseas shipments approximated 1.1 billion USD, up 21% from the same month last year. The rebound reflected improving demand across major markets, with exports to China continuing to surge and the US showing clear signs of recovery. Meanwhile, exports to the EU, Japan and the Middle East remained relatively stable.

Shrimp remained the top foreign currency earner, generating 445.9 million USD in June, up 20.7% year-on-year. Tra fish exports rose 7.7% to 209.1 million USD, while other fish products increased 19.8% to 198.8 million USD.

Several categories posted even stronger growth. Tuna exports climbed 28% to 85.9 million USD, squid and octopus shipments rose 26.5% to 77.9 million USD, while exports of crab and other crustaceans jumped 55.1% to 45.3 million USD. Shellfish recorded the fastest growth, soaring 77.8% to 31.3 million USD.

China, including Hong Kong, remained Vietnam's largest market in June, with exports rising 32.2% to 256.6 million USD. Shipments to the US increased sharply by 48.3% to 195.3 million USD, reflecting the return of orders after months of weak demand. Exports to Japan edged up 0.3%, while those to the EU, the Republic of Korea (RoK) and ASEAN grew by 6.3%, 29.5% and 16.5%, respectively.

For the first six months of the year, shrimp continued to dominate Vietnam's aquatic exports, earning 2.3 billion USD, up 13.6%, and accounting for more than 40% of the total value. Growth was mainly driven by robust demand from China, particularly for black tiger shrimp, lobster, frozen shrimp and premium products for restaurants and high-end consumers.

However, exporters continued to face stiff competition in the US from suppliers in Ecuador, Indonesia and India while anti-dumping and countervailing duties, the Seafood Import Monitoring Programme (SIMP), the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and stricter traceability requirements added to compliance costs.

Tra fish remained the second-largest export item, bringing in 1.1 billion USD, up 12.1%, and accounting for 19.4% of total aquatic export earnings. The product continued to benefit from stable global demand for affordable whitefish and Vietnam's advantages in production capacity, pricing and processing.

Other fish products also generated 1.1 billion USD, up 12%, highlighting the sector's increasingly diversified export structure.

Among marine products, squid and octopus exports rose 18.8% to 380.2 million USD, while crab and other crustaceans increased 26.2% to 206.2 million USD. Shellfish exports climbed 33.1% to 155.3 million USD. Tuna was the only major product posting weaker six-month results, with exports slipping 2% to 452.7 million USD, despite strong growth in June.

Le Hang, Deputy General Secretary of VASEP, said the sector's growth reflected not only recovering consumer demand but also exporters' ability to diversify markets and adjust product portfolios.

She noted that exporters have become more flexible in responding to smaller orders, shorter delivery schedules and increasingly strict requirements on pricing, quality, traceability and certification.

China remained Vietnam's largest importer during the first half, purchasing 1.5 billion USD worth of aquatic products, rising 37.9% and accounting for 25.8% of total shipments. This market was the main growth driver for shrimp, tra fish, lobster, shellfish as well as live and frozen seafood.

Exports to the US reached 897.9 million USD, almost unchanged from a year earlier, indicating that demand has yet to recover fully despite June's strong performance.
Shipments to Japan totalled 787.5 million USD, up 0.7%, while exports to the EU fell 0.8% to 536.7 million USD, partly due to the bloc's "yellow card" warning on illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. Exports to the Middle East dropped slightly, 0.1%, to at 166.6 million USD.

Meanwhile, exports to the RoK rose 9% to 419.4 million USD, ASEAN 15.8% to 380.2 million USD, and other markets 17.1% to 1.1 billion USD, underscoring the effectiveness of Vietnam's market diversification strategy.

Despite the positive outlook, VASEP warned that rising logistics costs remain a major challenge. Higher international container freight rates, limited refrigerated container availability and port congestion continue to put pressure on exporters, especially on routes to the US and the EU.

The association said the sector's strong first-half performance provides a solid foundation for achieving double-digit export growth in 2026. However, maintaining the momentum will require businesses to strengthen their presence in fast-growing markets such as China, ASEAN and the RoK, while continuing to meet increasingly stringent standards in the US, EU and Japan, alongside tighter cost control and greater investment in value-added products./.

VNA

See more

The Law on E-commerce, which takes effect on July 1, marks a major milestone in strengthening the legal framework for the digital economy (Illustrative image. Source: VNA)

E-commerce Law takes effect on July 1, paving way for more transparent digital marketplace

The law also encourages green e-commerce, more efficient logistics and environmentally friendly packaging, while creating greater opportunities for small and medium-sized enterprises, household businesses and start-ups. E-commerce platforms are now required to verify sellers' identities, disclose information on sellers, products and transaction conditions, proactively detect violations and establish effective complaint-handling mechanisms. Consumer protection has also been reinforced through clearer rules on complaints, refunds, compensation and personal data protection.

Delegates sample green durian curry at the event. (Photo: VNA)

Dak Lak puts durian in spotlight with culinary innovation

The event brought together internationally renowned culinary experts and chefs from Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia – three of the world's leading durian-producing and exporting countries. They presented seven innovative dishes blending Dak Lak durian with the culinary traditions of the three nations, ranging from appetisers and main courses to desserts.

Illustrative Image (Photo: VNA)

Lao Cai border trade surges, durian exports hit record high

Export value through border gates in the northern province of Lao Cai reached 636 million USD during the six-month period, up 62% from a year earlier and accounting for more than half of the province's total border trade. Agricultural products remained the dominant export category, making up over 90% of outbound shipments.

Deputy Prime Minister Ho Quoc Dung and other participants experience Vietnam's agricultural product traceability system on a durian. (Photo: danviet.vn)

National traceability system to strengthen reputation of Vietnamese farm produce: Deputy PM

Deputy Prime Minister Ho Quoc Dung praised the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment for developing and putting the system into operation, saying it would improve transparency across the agricultural supply chain, enable the tracing of product origins and help safeguard the quality and reputation of Vietnamese agricultural products in international markets.

Fireworks over the Han River in Da Nang. The central city is scheduled to host the Vietnam Financial Forum 2026 on July 9–10. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam Financial Forum 2026 to be held in Da Nang this July

The high-level forum will serve as a platform for in-depth discussions on key issues shaping Vietnam's financial sector, including capital market modernisation, digital finance, financial infrastructure, sustainable investment and venture capital.

Vu Dai Thang, Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee, speaks at the national conference on studying, disseminating and implementing the Politburo’s Resolution No. 10-NQ/TW on developing the foreign-invested economic sector, held in Hanoi on June 30, 2026. (Photo: VNA)

Local authorities, FDI businesses propose measures to advance foreign-invested economic sector

Chairman of the Ho Chi Minh City People’s Committee Nguyen Van Duoc proposed priorities linked to the Vietnam International Financial Centre (VIFC) to draw new-generation, high-quality capital flows. These include shifting from a project-attraction approach towards building an investment ecosystem and positioning the IFC as a strategic instrument for implementing Vietnam’s new-generation FDI strategy.

At a working session between Vietnamese Ambassador to Israel Nguyen Ky Son and Israeli Minister of Economy and Industry Nir Barkat. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam, Israel vow to speed up free trade deal

During January-May, Vietnam-Israel trade neared 1.6 billion USD. Vietnam's exports to Israel jumped 30.6% year-on-year to 462 million USD. If the current growth momentum holds, full-year trade is on track to reach around 3.9 billion USD, with Vietnam's exports set to surpass 1 billion USD for the first time.

A memorandum of understanding is signed between the Hanoi People's Committee and AMD Vietnam Corporation, SunEdu Joint Stock Company, a member of SunElectronics Group, on cooperation in training and developing high-quality human resources. (Photo courtesy of the organising committee)

Hanoi unveils 276 investment projects under 100-year development vision

According to the municipal People's Committee, Hanoi's investment attraction strategy is shifting from prioritising capital volume to focusing on investment quality. In the coming period, the city will seek strategic investors capable of driving growth through high-value projects in semiconductors, integrated circuit design, artificial intelligence (AI), big data, biotechnology, new materials, research and development (R&D), innovation centres, modern logistics, green finance, financial technology (fintech), education and training, and specialised healthcare.

Shopping via Co.op Online is becoming increasingly popular among consumers. (Photo: sggp.org.vn)

E-commerce helps expand market access for Vietnamese products

E-commerce is becoming an essential pillar of the digital economy as Vietnamese businesses are shifting from online sales to building digital commerce ecosystems, connecting production, logistics, and distribution to expand their markets and participate more deeply in the global value chain.

A tilapia fingerling nursery operated by Cuu Long Fisheries JSC in Vinh Kim commune, Vinh Long province. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam's tilapia exports maintain strong growth

Vietnam's tilapia export revenue in the first five months of 2026 hit 62 million USD, more than doubling that in the same period last year, reflecting a strong recovery in international demand

Authorities in Ho Chi Minh City conduct regular inspections to ensure fishing vessels that fail to meet operational requirements are prevented from sailing to the sea. (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City rolls out digital fishing logs in renewed push against IUU fishing

Under the rollout plan, the 234 vessels of 24 metres or more must complete installation before July 1, followed by the 1,963 vehicles between 15 and under 24 metres by September 1, and the 626 others between 12 and under 15 metres by January 1 next year. All the vessels will be required to use the system throughout their fishing trips.

Border guards at the Lao Cai International Border Gate uncover and seize multiple cases involving the illegal transport of foreign currency through the Lao Cai International Road Border Gate. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam adopts action plan to combat money laundering, terrorist financing

Ministries are required to develop, issue and effectively implement sector-specific policies and action plans by September 2026 to mitigate money laundering risks in line with the national action plan on addressing risks related to money laundering, terrorist financing and proliferation financing for the 2023–2028 period.

Pham Tan Hoa, Vice Chairman of the Tay Ninh People's Committee, speaks at the meeting. (Photo:VNA)

RoK partner supports Tay Ninh in UAV ecosystem development

The RoK is one of Tay Ninh's important foreign investors. Among more than 40 countries and territories investing in the province, it ranks second in the number of projects and fourth in total registered capital, with 298 projects worth more than 2.36 billion USD.