CHILE

ANALYSIS OF CHILE’S TRADE: DATA, PRODUCTS & PROCEDURES, FOR MORE DETAILED INFORMATION OR A SPECIFIC MARKET INTELLIGENCE MATTER OR ANY OTHER MATTER PLEASE CONTACT US

1. MACROECONOMIC TRADE CONTEXT

Annual Trade Volume 2024:

  • Total Exports: US$101.0 billion (↑ 2.96% from 2023)
  • Total Imports: US$84.3 billion
  • Trade Balance Surplus: US$16.7 billion (merchandise)
  • Exports Per Capita: US$5,120 (60th globally)
  • Imports Per Capita: US$4,160 (90th globally)
  • Global Export Rank: 41st out of 226
  • Global Import Rank: 46th out of 226
  • GDP: US$330 billion (45th globally)
  • GDP Per Capita: US$16,800 (71st globally)
  • Currency: Chilean Peso (CLP), floating exchange rate
  • Economic Complexity Index (Trade): 72nd out of 130 (ECI: -0.15, 2024)
  • Economic Complexity Index (Technology): 26th out of 96 (ECI: 0.86, 2021)
  • Economic Complexity Index (Research): 22nd out of 137 (ECI: 1.26, 2023)

Key Trade Trends (2024-2025):

Indicator2024 ValueChange
Total ExportsUS$101.0 billion↑ 2.96% from 2023
Exports (annual)US$99.09 billionUN Comtrade data
Imports (annual)US$84.29 billionUN Comtrade data
Trade SurplusUS$14.80 billionUN Comtrade data
Export Destinations180+ marketsDiversified portfolio

Latest Trade Data (November 2025):

IndicatorNovember 2025Change (YoY)
ExportsUS$8.39 billion↓ 3.22% from Nov 2024
ImportsUS$7.15 billion↑ 15.6% from Nov 2024
Trade BalanceUS$+1.24 billion surplusPositive

Geographic Distribution 2024:

EXPORT MARKETS (US$101.0B):

RankCountryExport ValueShare
1China~US$34 billion (est.)33.7%
2United States~US$14.5 billion (est.)14.4%
3Japan~US$8.5 billion (est.)8.4%
4South Korea~US$6.5 billion (est.)6.4%
5Brazil~US$4.0 billion (est.)4.0%

*Source: OEC , Trading Economics *

IMPORT ORIGINS (US$84.3B):

RankCountryImport ValueShare
1China~US$24.0 billion (est.)28.5%
2United States~US$16.0 billion (est.)19.0%
3Brazil~US$7.5 billion (est.)8.9%
4Argentina~US$5.8 billion (est.)6.9%
5Germany~US$3.5 billion (est.)4.2%

Trade Balance by Major Partner (2024):

PartnerTrade Balance (US$)
China+17.7 billion surplus
Japan+6.32 billion surplus
South Korea+3.09 billion surplus
Netherlands+1.35 billion surplus
India+1.28 billion surplus
Argentina-5.75 billion deficit
Germany-2.06 billion deficit
Brazil-1.9 billion deficit
Vietnam-898 million deficit
Peru-709 million deficit

2. DETAILED EXPORT PRODUCT ANALYSIS

A. GLOBAL EXPORT LEADERSHIP (2024)

Chile is the world’s largest exporter of 24 products

RankProduct CategoryGlobal Position
1CopperWorld’s largest exporter
2Carbonate of LithiumWorld’s largest exporter
3Fresh CherriesWorld’s largest exporter
4Frozen Salmon FilletsWorld’s largest exporter
5Frozen MackerelWorld’s largest exporter
6Canned Mussels (Seafood)World’s largest exporter
7Dried PlumsWorld’s largest exporter
8Roasted Molybdenum ConcentrateWorld’s largest exporter
9IodineWorld’s largest exporter
10Potassium NitrateWorld’s largest exporter

Additional Global #1 Products:

  • Molybdenum oxides and hydroxides
  • Sodium nitrate
  • Fresh plums
  • Frozen trout fillets
  • Frozen cod fillets
  • Industrial algae
  • Fresh salmon fillets
  • Fish meal
  • Lithium hydroxide
  • Coniferous plywood
  • Shelled hazelnuts
  • Boron oxides
  • Frozen trout
  • Baby food

B. MINING PRODUCTS (Dominant Share)

1. Copper: US$20.0+ billion (>20% of total exports)

ProductExport ValueNotes
Copper OreUS$2.79B (Nov 2025)Primary export
Refined CopperUS$1.11B (Nov 2025)Processed metal
Raw CopperSignificantGrowing processing
  • World’s largest copper producer and exporter
  • Major mines: Escondida (world’s largest), Collahuasi, El Teniente, Los Pelambres
  • State-owned Codelco: World’s largest copper producer
  • Primary Destinations: China (60%+), Japan, South Korea, United States

2. Lithium Compounds: US$5.0+ billion (est.)

ProductGlobal Market ShareNotes
Carbonate of Lithium~80% of world marketWorld’s largest exporter
Lithium HydroxideWorld leaderFor EV batteries
Boron CompoundsWorld leaderBoron oxides
  • World’s largest lithium producer (Salar de Atacama)
  • Strategic resource: Critical for EV batteries, energy storage
  • Codelco expansion: 2.5 million metric tons LME/year quota approved (2031-2060)
  • Primary Destinations: China, South Korea, Japan, United States, Europe

3. Molybdenum: US$1.5+ billion (est.)

ProductGlobal Position
Roasted Molybdenum ConcentrateWorld’s largest exporter
Molybdenum Oxides and HydroxidesWorld’s largest exporter
  • Byproduct of copper mining
  • Primary Destinations: China, Japan, Netherlands, United States

4. Industrial Minerals

ProductGlobal PositionNotes
IodineWorld’s largest exporterMedical, industrial uses
Potassium NitrateWorld’s largest exporterFertilizers
Sodium NitrateWorld’s largest exporterIndustrial uses

C. AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS

1. Fresh Fruits: US$6.0+ billion (est.)

ProductGlobal PositionSeason
Fresh CherriesWorld’s largest exporterNovember-January
Fresh PlumsWorld’s largest exporterSummer
Dried PlumsWorld’s largest exporterYear-round
Fresh GrapesMajor exporterDecember-April
Fresh ApplesMajor exporterFebruary-October
Fresh BlueberriesMajor exporterOctober-March
Fresh AvocadosGrowing exporterYear-round
  • Counter-seasonal supply: Northern Hemisphere winter
  • Primary Destinations: China, United States, Europe, Latin America
  • Cherry exports: US$2.0+ billion (rapidly growing)

2. Nuts and Processed Foods

ProductGlobal PositionNotes
Shelled HazelnutsWorld’s largest exporterGrowing sector
Baby FoodWorld’s largest exporterProcessed exports
Dried FruitsMajor exporterPlums, apricots

D. FISHERY AND AQUACULTURE PRODUCTS

1. Salmon and Trout: US$6.0+ billion (est.)

ProductGlobal PositionNotes
Fresh Salmon FilletsWorld’s largest exporterPremium product
Frozen Salmon FilletsWorld’s largest exporterMajor volume
Frozen Trout FilletsWorld’s largest exporterGrowing segment
Frozen TroutWorld’s largest exporterWhole fish
  • World’s 2nd largest salmon producer (after Norway)
  • Major farming regions: Los Lagos, Aysén, Magallanes
  • Primary Destinations: United States, Japan, Brazil, China, Russia

2. Other Seafood

ProductGlobal PositionNotes
Frozen MackerelWorld’s largest exporterIndustrial fishing
Frozen Cod FilletsWorld’s largest exporterDeep-water cod
Canned MusselsWorld’s largest exporterAquaculture
Fish MealWorld’s largest exporterAnimal feed
Industrial AlgaeWorld’s largest exporterFood additives

E. FOREST PRODUCTS

1. Wood and Derivatives: US$2.5+ billion (est.)

ProductGlobal PositionNotes
Coniferous PlywoodWorld’s largest exporterConstruction material
Sulfate Chemical WoodpulpMajor exporterUS$233M (Nov 2025)
Sawn WoodMajor exporterRadiata pine
  • Primary Destinations: China, United States, Mexico, Saudi Arabia

F. OTHER MAJOR EXPORT CATEGORIES

HS CodeProduct CategoryExport Value (Nov 2025)
GoldUS$461 million
Commodities not elsewhere specifiedUS$406 million
Fish FilletsUS$337 million
03Fish and crustaceansUS$287 million (Sept 2024)
47Wood pulpUS$233 million (Sept 2024)

G. TOP EXPORTS (November 2025)

RankProductExport Value
1Copper OreUS$2.79 billion
2Refined CopperUS$1.11 billion
3GoldUS$461 million
4Commodities not elsewhere specifiedUS$406 million
5Fish FilletsUS$337 million

3. DETAILED IMPORT PRODUCT ANALYSIS

A. MINERAL FUELS AND ENERGY PRODUCTS (Largest Import Category)

  • Total Value: US$15.96 billion (2024)
  • Share of total imports: 18.9%
  • Products: Crude oil, refined petroleum, natural gas, coal
  • Primary Sources: United States, Brazil, Argentina, Ecuador, Colombia

B. MACHINERY AND ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT

1. Machinery, nuclear reactors, boilers (HS 84): US$10.46 billion (2024)

  • Share of total imports: 12.4%
  • Products: Industrial machinery, construction equipment, agricultural machinery, power generation equipment
  • Primary Sources: United States, China, Germany, Brazil, Italy

2. Electrical, electronic equipment (HS 85): US$8.21 billion (2024)

  • Share of total imports: 9.7%
  • Products: Telecommunications equipment (US$375M Nov 2025), computers (US$251M Nov 2025), consumer electronics, components
  • Primary Sources: China, United States, Brazil, Mexico, South Korea

C. TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT

1. Vehicles other than railway, tramway (HS 87): US$7.95 billion (2024)

  • Share of total imports: 9.4%
  • Cars: Passenger vehicles, SUVs
  • Commercial vehicles: Trucks, buses
  • Parts and accessories
  • Primary Sources: Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, South Korea, Japan, China

D. CHEMICAL AND ALLIED PRODUCTS

CategoryImport Value (2024)
Plastics (HS 39)US$2.72 billion
Pharmaceutical products (HS 30)US$2.36 billion
Inorganic chemicals, precious metal compound, isotope (HS 28)US$1.46 billion
Essential oils, perfumes, cosmetics, toiletries (HS 33)US$1.20 billion
Miscellaneous chemical products (HS 38)US$1.13 billion
Organic chemicals (HS 29)US$1.08 billion

E. FOOD AND AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS

CategoryImport Value (2024)Notes
Meat and edible meat offal (HS 02)US$2.16 billionBovine meat US$721M (Nov 2025)
Residues, wastes of food industry, animal fodder (HS 23)US$1.26 billionAnimal feed
Animal, vegetable fats and oils, cleavage products (HS 15)US$1.14 billionVegetable oils
Cereals (HS 10)US$1.08 billionWheat, corn, rice

F. MEDICAL AND SCIENTIFIC EQUIPMENT

CategoryImport Value (2024)Notes
Optical, photo, technical, medical apparatus (HS 90)US$1.75 billionMedical instruments US$535M (Nov 2025)
Orthopedic AppliancesUS$345M (Nov 2025)Rapidly growing category

G. METALS AND METAL PRODUCTS

CategoryImport Value (2024)
Articles of iron or steel (HS 73)US$1.76 billion
Iron and steel (HS 72)US$1.49 billion

H. TEXTILES AND APPAREL

CategoryImport Value (2024)
Articles of apparel, knit or crocheted (HS 61)US$1.47 billion
Articles of apparel, not knit or crocheted (HS 62)US$1.37 billion
Footwear (HS 64)US$1.12 billion

I. OTHER MAJOR IMPORT CATEGORIES

CategoryImport Value (2024)
Rubbers (HS 40)US$1.28 billion
Paper and paperboard, articles of pulp (HS 48)US$939 million
Ores, slag and ash (HS 26)US$1.02 billion
Furniture, lighting signs, prefabricated buildings (HS 94)US$861 million

J. TOP IMPORTS (November 2025)

RankProductImport Value
1Bovine MeatUS$721 million
2Medical InstrumentsUS$535 million
3TelephonesUS$375 million
4Orthopedic AppliancesUS$345 million
5ComputersUS$251 million

4. TRADE PROCEDURES & REGULATIONS – DEEP DIVE

A. CUSTOMS LEGAL FRAMEWORK

1. Primary Authority:

  • Servicio Nacional de Aduanas (Chilean Customs Service)
  • Website: aduana.cl

2. Legal Basis:

  • Ordenanza de Aduanas (Customs Ordinance) – Primary customs legislation
  • Decreto con Fuerza de Ley N° 30 (Customs Law)
  • Ley N° 21.713 (Tax Compliance Law, October 2024)
  • Ley N° 21.716 (Corrective amendments, November 2024)

3. International Memberships:

  • WTO Member: Since 1995
  • Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP): Member
  • Pacific Alliance: Founding member (with Colombia, Mexico, Peru)
  • MERCOSUR Associate Member: Through Economic Complementation Agreement (ACE 35)
  • Andean Community: Associate member
  • Bilateral FTAs: 30+ agreements covering 65+ markets

4. Key Trade Agreements:

AgreementStatusCoverage
Chile-China FTASigned 2005 (upgraded 2017)Comprehensive
Chile-USA FTAEffective 2004Comprehensive, duty-free since 2015
Chile-EU FTASigned 2002Comprehensive
Chile-Japan EPAEffective 2007Comprehensive
Chile-South Korea FTAEffective 2004Comprehensive
Chile-India PTAEffective 2007Limited preferences
CPTPPMember11 Asia-Pacific countries
Pacific AllianceMemberIntegrated with Colombia, Mexico, Peru

B. 2024-2025 MAJOR REGULATORY REFORMS

1. Tax Compliance Law (Ley N° 21.713) – October 2024

Key Customs-Related Provisions:

ProvisionDescriptionEffective Date
$500 Duty-Free ThresholdImport duty exemption for goods ≤ US$500 FOB25 October 2025
$41 VAT-Free ThresholdVAT exemption for goods ≤ US$41 FOB25 October 2025
E-commerce VATVAT on remote purchases through digital platforms25 October 2025
Temporary Price DeclarationAllows provisional pricing for conditional sales1 November 2024
Email NotificationsAll customs communications via email1 January 2025

Important Clarification (Ley N° 21.716, November 2024):

  • The $500 duty-free exemption and $41 VAT-free threshold will take effect simultaneously on 25 October 2025
  • Until that date: Current regime applies (41 USD exemption from all taxes)

De Minimis Regime (Effective 25 October 2025):

Shipment ValueDuty (6%)VAT (19%)
≤ US$41ExemptExempt
US$41.01 – US$500Exempt19% of FOB
> US$5006% of FOB19% of (FOB + Duty)

E-commerce Platform Requirements:

  • Digital platforms must register with Chilean IRS (Servicio de Impuestos Internos)
  • Must collect VAT on sales to Chilean consumers
  • Exemption if platform proves VAT was collected at sale

2. Resolution No. 3,944 (October 2024) – Temporary Price Declaration

Purpose: Regulates declaration of provisional prices for goods with final price dependent on future conditions

Applicable Goods:

  • Copper ores and concentrates
  • Distillate fuel oils
  • Natural gas
  • Other commodities with pricing formulas

Requirements:

  • Pro-forma or provisional invoice must be attached
  • Final price must be declared within 30 days of confirmation
  • Maximum 180 days from import declaration

3. Resolution No. 4,359 (January 2025) – Leased Goods

Effective Date: 7 January 2025

Documentation Requirements:

  • Copy of lease agreement
  • Pro-forma invoice (not commercial invoice)
  • Sworn affidavit for leased goods

Valuation:

  • Standard valuation methods apply
  • If not applicable, “reasonable criteria” (list prices, expert appraisal)
  • Importer may request customs valuation assessment

4. Resolution No. 3944 (October 2024) – Customs Procedures

New Provisions:

  • Updated forms for import declarations
  • Clarified procedures for specific goods
  • Enhanced electronic processing requirements

5. Resolution No. 105/2024 and 107/2024 – Tax Procedures

  • 105/2024: Simplified taxation system registration
  • 107/2024: VAT declaration and payment procedures

C. IMPORT PROCEDURES

1. Documentation Requirements

Mandatory Documents:

Document TypeRequirementsApplicable Goods
Commercial InvoiceHS code, FOB value, country of origin, company logo, phone, addressAll commercial shipments
Bill of Lading / Air WaybillOriginal negotiable documentAll shipments
Packing ListDetailed weight, package contentsAll shipments
Certificate of OriginFor FTA preferential claimsFTA-eligible goods
SAG Health CertificatePhytosanitary/veterinaryAgricultural, food products
MSDS (Safety Data Sheet)Chemical safety informationChemicals, hazardous materials
Import LicensePrior authorizationRestricted goods
Lease DocumentationLease agreement, pro-forma invoice, affidavitLeased goods (Resolution 4,359)

2. Special Documentation Requirements

Personal Effects Shipments:

  • Excel spreadsheet listing (box number, description, value)
  • Detailed inventory for household moves

Used Goods:

  • Special permits required
  • Age restrictions apply
  • Must not be considered commercial import

3. Import Licensing Categories

Restricted Goods (Require Prior Approval):

Product CategoryRegulating Authority
Agricultural productsServicio Agrícola y Ganadero (SAG)
Food productsMinisterio de Salud (MINSAL)
PharmaceuticalsInstituto de Salud Pública (ISP)
Medical devicesISP
CosmeticsISP
ChemicalsMinisterio de Medio Ambiente
Firearms/explosivesDirección General de Movilización Nacional
Telecommunications equipmentSubtel

4. Prohibited Goods

Absolutely Prohibited:

  • Narcotic drugs
  • Hazardous waste
  • Used tires (restricted)
  • Weapons of mass destruction materials
  • Items threatening public health or morality

Conditionally Prohibited:

  • Used vehicles (age restrictions)
  • Used clothing (humanitarian exceptions)
  • Animal products (health certification required)
  • Plants and plant products (phytosanitary certification required)

5. Customs Clearance Process

Step 1: Pre-arrival Processing

  • Electronic submission through SICEX/SIDAP system
  • Risk assessment by customs

Step 2: Channel Selection

ChannelInspection LevelTimeframe
GreenNo physical inspection1-2 days
YellowDocument verification only3-5 days
RedDocument verification + physical inspection5-10+ days

Step 3: Inspection (2025 Updates):

  • US exports undergo 100% container scanning before departure
  • Arrival in Chile may trigger secondary inspection
  • Inspection costs can reach thousands of dollars
  • Potential delays of weeks

Step 4: Duty and Tax Payment

  • Duties and VAT calculated
  • Electronic payment through authorized banks
  • Proof of payment required for release

Step 5: Release

  • Customs release order issued
  • Goods delivered to importer

6. Import Valuation

  • WTO Valuation Method: Transaction value basis
  • Currency conversion: Based on official exchange rate (Banco Central de Chile)
  • Transfer pricing: Related party transactions require market value demonstration
  • Advance Pricing Agreements: Available for related parties (jointly approved by IRS and Customs)

7. Luxury Goods

  • Luxury tax: 15% or higher on certain goods
  • Categories: Alcohol, tobacco, precious metals, high-end vehicles
  • 2025 updates: Tax rates and classifications may apply

D. TAXATION & DUTIES

1. Customs Duties

General Import Duty:

  • Standard Rate: 6% (maintained since 2003)
  • MFN Average: 6% (most products)
  • FTA Partners: 0% for qualifying goods
  • Duty-free threshold: US$500 FOB (effective 25 October 2025)

Preferential Rates:

  • US FTA: 0% for qualifying US origin goods (since 2015)
  • China FTA: 0% for most products
  • EU FTA: 0% for most products
  • CPTPP: Preferential rates for member countries

2. Value Added Tax (IVA)

  • Standard Rate: 19%
  • Zero Rated: Exports, international transport
  • Exempt: Certain financial services, education, healthcare
  • VAT on Imports: 19% of (CIF + duty)
  • De Minimis: US$41 VAT-free threshold (effective 25 October 2025)

3. Additional Taxes

Tax TypeRateApplicable To
Luxury Tax15%+Alcohol, tobacco, precious metals, high-end vehicles
Specific TaxesVariesFuels, certain products

4. Customs Duty Exemptions

Qualifying Goods/Situations:

  • Goods under US$500 FOB (effective October 2025)
  • Personal effects (within limits)
  • Diplomatic imports
  • Temporary imports (with guarantee)
  • Re-exported goods

E. SPECIAL TRADE REGIMES

1. Temporary Admission

  • Goods imported for specific purpose and re-export
  • Time limit: Usually 6-12 months
  • Security: Bank guarantee or cash deposit
  • Applicable to: Exhibitions, professional equipment, samples

2. Bonded Warehousing

  • Depósito Aduanero: Storage without duty payment
  • Purpose: For re-export or subsequent local release
  • Time limit: Up to 5 years
  • Requirements: Bonded warehouse license

3. Drawback Regime

  • Refund of import duties on goods subsequently re-exported
  • Eligibility: Goods incorporated into exported products
  • Application: Within 6 months of export

4. Free Zones

Major Free Zones:

Free ZoneLocationSpecialization
Zona Franca de Iquique (ZOFRI)IquiqueLargest, general trading
Zona Franca de Punta ArenasPunta ArenasSouthern region
Zona Franca de AricaAricaNorthern region

Free Zone Benefits:

  • Duty-free imports
  • VAT exemption
  • Tax incentives
  • Simplified procedures
  • Strategic locations for regional trade

F. SECTOR-SPECIFIC REGULATIONS

1. Food and Agricultural Products (SAG)

Requirements:

  • Phytosanitary certificates for plant products
  • Veterinary certificates for animal products
  • SAG registration for importers
  • Health and safety standards compliance
  • Labeling in Spanish required

2. Pharmaceutical Products (ISP)

  • Product registration: Required for all pharmaceuticals
  • GMP certification: From country of origin
  • Import license: Per shipment authorization
  • Cold chain requirements: For temperature-sensitive products

3. Cosmetics and Personal Care (ISP)

  • Product notification: Through ISP system
  • Safety assessment reports
  • GMP certification recommended
  • Labeling: Spanish mandatory

4. Medical Devices (ISP)

  • Registration required based on risk class
  • Technical documentation
  • Import authorization before shipment

5. Telecommunications Equipment (Subtel)

  • Type approval: Mandatory for all telecom equipment
  • Homologation: Certification that equipment meets standards
  • Testing: By accredited labs

G. COMPLIANCE & ENFORCEMENT

1. Penalties for Violations

ViolationPenalty
Under-declaration100-300% of evaded duty
MisclassificationDuty adjustment + fines
False documentationFine + potential criminal prosecution
SmugglingImprisonment + substantial fines
Customs violationsUp to 25% of customs value (new penalty)

Resolution Mechanism (2024 Update):

  • Acceptance of penalty: Maximum 20% of statutory fine
  • Contested penalty (if rejected): Minimum 20% of statutory fine

2. Appeals Process

  • Recurso de Resguardo: New protection mechanism for taxpayer rights
  • Administrative appeal: To customs regional or national directorate
  • Judicial review: To tax and customs courts

3. Post-Clearance Audit

  • Risk-based selection
  • Valuation accuracy verification
  • Classification review
  • Origin verification
  • Record keeping: Minimum 5 years

5. TRADE AGREEMENTS NETWORK

A. MULTILATERAL AGREEMENTS:

AgreementStatusCoverage
WTOMember since 1995Multilateral trade rules
CPTPPMember11 Asia-Pacific countries
Pacific AllianceFounding memberColombia, Mexico, Peru

B. BILATERAL FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS (30+):

PartnerEffectiveCoverage
United States2004Comprehensive, 100% duty-free
China2005 (upgraded 2017)Comprehensive
European Union2002Comprehensive
Japan2007Economic Partnership Agreement
South Korea2004Comprehensive
India2007Preferential Trade Agreement
Canada1997Comprehensive (now CPTPP)
Mexico1999 (under Pacific Alliance)Comprehensive
Peru2009 (under Pacific Alliance)Comprehensive
Colombia2009 (under Pacific Alliance)Comprehensive
Australia2009Comprehensive
Vietnam2014Comprehensive
Malaysia2012Comprehensive
Thailand2015Comprehensive
Turkey2011Comprehensive
Egypt2014Comprehensive
Hong Kong2014Comprehensive

C. REGIONAL AGREEMENTS:

AgreementStatusCoverage
MERCOSURAssociate member (ACE 35)Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay
Andean CommunityAssociate memberBolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
EFTAFTA signedSwitzerland, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein
Central AmericaFTAs with Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua

D. RULES OF ORIGIN:

General Criteria:

  • Change in Tariff Classification (CTC) at HS 2, 4, or 6 digit level
  • Regional Value Content (RVC) 30-50% depending on agreement
  • Specific processes for certain products

Documentation:

  • Certificate of Origin issued by authorized entities
  • Self-certification available for approved exporters

6. MAJOR TRADE INFRASTRUCTURE

A. PORTS

Major Ports (North to South):

PortLocationSpecializationAnnual Throughput
Puerto de AricaAricaGeneral cargo, containersRegional hub
Puerto de IquiqueIquiqueFree zone (ZOFRI), general cargoMajor FTZ port
Puerto de AntofagastaAntofagastaMining exports (copper)3.0+ million tons
Puerto de MejillonesMejillonesMining exports, bulkGrowing port
Puerto de CoquimboCoquimboGeneral cargo, agricultureRegional
Puerto de ValparaísoValparaísoContainer, general cargo1.0+ million TEU
Puerto de San AntonioSan AntonioLargest container port1.5+ million TEU
Puerto de TalcahuanoTalcahuanoIndustrial, forestryRegional
Puerto de San VicenteSan VicenteBulk, containersAdjacent to Talcahuano
Puerto de CoronelCoronelForestry products (wood pulp)Major forestry port
Puerto de LirquénLirquénForestry, general cargoForestry exports
Puerto de Puerto MonttPuerto MonttSalmon exports, generalSalmon hub
Puerto de ChacabucoChacabucoSalmon, generalAysén region
Puerto de Punta ArenasPunta ArenasSouthern logisticsMagallanes region

B. AIRPORTS:

AirportLocationCargo VolumeNotes
Arturo Merino Benítez (SCL)Santiago300,000+ tonsMain cargo gateway
Diego Aracena (IQQ)Iquique50,000+ tonsFree zone cargo
Cerro Moreno (ANF)Antofagasta30,000+ tonsMining cargo
El Tepual (PMC)Puerto Montt20,000+ tonsSalmon exports

C. LAND BORDER CROSSINGS

With Argentina (Major Crossings):

CrossingRouteImportance
Paso Los Libertadores (Cristo Redentor)RN 7 (Ch) – RN 7 (Arg)Main trade route to Argentina
Paso PehuencheRN 115 (Ch) – RN 145 (Arg)Southern crossing
Paso Pino HachadoRN 242 (Ch) – RN 242 (Arg)Neuquén connection
Paso Cardenal SamoréRN 231 (Ch) – RN 231 (Arg)Lake crossing
Paso Integración AustralRN 40 (Ch) – RN 40 (Arg)Southernmost crossing

With Bolivia:

CrossingRouteImportance
Paso Chungará – Tambo QuemadoRN 11 (Ch)Main trade route to Bolivia

With Peru:

CrossingRouteImportance
Paso Santa Rosa – TacnaRN 5 (Ch)Northern trade route

D. TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE

Highways:

  • Ruta 5 (Pan-American Highway): North-south spine (3,300+ km)
  • Ruta 68: Santiago-Valparaíso (port connection)
  • Ruta 7 (Carretera Austral): Southern highway

Railways:

  • Ferrocarril de Antofagasta a Bolivia (FCAB): Mining exports to Bolivia
  • Ferrocarril Arica-La Paz: International connection
  • Metrotren: Santiago-Chillán passenger (limited freight)
  • Mining railroads: Private lines serving mines

Pipelines:

  • Gasoducto Norandino: Argentina to northern Chile
  • Gasoducto GasAtacama: Argentina to Mejillones
  • Transandino pipeline: Oil products

E. LOGISTICS PLATFORMS

  • ZOFRI (Iquique): Major free zone and logistics hub
  • Puerto Seco Los Andes: Dry port near Argentine border
  • Logistic centers: Santiago, Valparaíso, San Antonio, Antofagasta

7. EMERGING TRENDS & FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS

A. Trade Surplus Performance (2024-2025)

PeriodTrade Balance
2024 (full year)US$14.80 billion surplus
June 2025US$1.33 billion surplus
November 2025US$1.24 billion surplus

Decade Average: US$8.9 billion surplus (2015-2024)

B. Global Export Leadership Expansion

2024 Milestone: 24 products ranked #1 globally
2023-2024 growth: 5.9% export increase
Export value milestone: First time exceeding US$100 billion

Diversification Progress:

  • Mining: Copper, lithium, molybdenum, iodine
  • Aquaculture: Salmon, trout, mussels
  • Agriculture: Cherries, plums, nuts
  • Forestry: Plywood, wood pulp
  • Processed foods: Baby food, fish meal

C. Lithium Strategic Development

Codelco Expansion (2025):

  • 2.5 million metric tons LME/year quota approved (2031-2060)
  • Partnership with SQM for Salar de Atacama
  • New projects in development

Global Position:

  • ~80% of global lithium carbonate market
  • Critical supplier for EV battery supply chain
  • Downstream processing opportunities

D. 2024-2025 Regulatory Modernization

Tax Compliance Law (Ley 21.713/21.716):

  • De minimis threshold increased to US$500 (effective 2025)
  • E-commerce VAT framework
  • Temporary price declaration for commodities
  • Enhanced customs controls

Procedural Reforms:

  • Email notifications (January 2025)
  • Leased goods regulation (Resolution 4,359)
  • Advance pricing agreements (joint Customs-IRS)
  • New penalty framework

Digital Transformation:

  • SICEX/SIDAP electronic systems
  • Risk management enhancement
  • Single window development

E. Trade Agreement Utilization

US FTA (since 2004):

  • 100% duty-free access for US goods
  • Strong utilization by US exporters

China FTA (since 2005):

  • Rapid growth in agricultural exports (cherries)
  • Copper and lithium dominate

Pacific Alliance Integration:

  • Enhanced regional value chains
  • Platform for Asian trade

CPTPP Benefits:

  • Access to 11 Asia-Pacific markets
  • Modern trade rules (digital trade, services)

F. SME Export Growth

2024 Export Participation:

  • 53% of exporters are SMEs
  • 8,500+ total exporting companies

Support Programs:

  • ProChile export promotion
  • Technical assistance for first-time exporters
  • E-commerce platforms for SMEs

G. Challenges and Opportunities

Challenges:

  • Commodity price volatility
  • Processing value added limited (mostly raw exports)
  • Infrastructure gaps in southern regions
  • Water scarcity affecting mining and agriculture
  • Competition from other lithium producers

Opportunities:

  • Downstream lithium processing (battery materials)
  • Green hydrogen production potential
  • Expanding agricultural exports to Asia
  • Services exports (mining engineering, software)
  • Digital trade growth

8. KEY CONTACTS & RESOURCES

A. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES:

  1. Servicio Nacional de Aduanas (Chilean Customs)
    • Website: aduana.cl
    • Customs procedures, declarations, tariffs
  2. Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
    • Website: minrel.gob.cl
    • Dirección General de Relaciones Económicas Internacionales (DIRECON) – Trade negotiations
  3. Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero (SAG)
    • Website: sag.gob.cl
    • Agricultural and livestock imports/exports
  4. Instituto de Salud Pública (ISP)
    • Website: ispch.gob.cl
    • Pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, medical devices
  5. Subsecretaría de Telecomunicaciones (Subtel)
  6. ProChile
  7. Instituto Nacional de Estadísticas (INE)
    • Website: ine.cl
    • Trade statistics, economic data
  8. Banco Central de Chile
    • Website: bcentral.cl
    • Exchange rates, balance of payments
  9. Servicio de Impuestos Internos (SII)
    • Website: sii.cl
    • VAT, tax compliance, advance pricing agreements

B. BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS:

  1. Sociedad de Fomento Fabril (SOFOFA)
    • Website: sofofa.cl
    • Manufacturing industry association
  2. Cámara Nacional de Comercio (CNC)
    • Website: cnc.cl
    • Chamber of commerce
  3. Asociación de Exportadores de Manufacturas (ASEXMA)
    • Website: asexma.cl
    • Manufacturing exporters
  4. Consejo Minero
  5. SalmonChile
  6. Asociación de Exportadores de Frutas de Chile (ASOEX)
    • Website: asoex.cl
    • Fruit exporters association

C. TRADE PORTALS AND DIGITAL PLATFORMS:

PlatformPurposeWebsite
SICEXImport/export declarationssicex.cl
SIDAPCustoms processingaduana.cl
ChileAtiendeGovernment services portalchileatiende.cl
ProChile Market IntelligenceExport data, market researchprochile.gob.cl/mercados

D. PRACTICAL GUIDANCE FOR TRADERS:

For Exporters to Chile:

  1. De Minimis Planning (Effective October 2025):
    • Shipments ≤ US$500 FOB: 0% duty, 19% VAT (if >$41)
    • Shipments ≤ US$41: Fully exempt
    • Shipments > US$500: 6% duty + 19% VAT
  2. Documentation Essentials:
    • Complete commercial invoice with HS code, FOB value, origin
    • Certificate of origin for FTA preferences (US, China, EU, etc.)
    • SAG/ISP permits for regulated products
  3. FTA Utilization:
    • US goods: 0% duty (since 2015)
    • Chinese goods: 0% under FTA
    • European goods: 0% under FTA
  4. HS Code Accuracy:
    • 2025 updates for electronics (HS 8517 subdivisions)
    • Battery category changes (HS 8507 lithium batteries may face 15% luxury tax)
  5. Regulated Products:
    • Agricultural products: SAG certification required
    • Pharmaceuticals/medical devices: ISP registration
    • Telecom equipment: Subtel type approval
  6. Payment Terms:
    • Letters of credit common for new relationships
    • Open account possible after trust

For Importers from Chile:

  1. Certificate of Origin: Obtain from authorized chambers (SOFOFA, CNC, etc.)
  2. FTA Preferences: Claim under Chile’s 30+ FTAs
  3. Product Certifications:
    • Quality certificates available from manufacturers
    • SAG certificates for agricultural products
    • ISP certificates for pharmaceuticals
  4. Lithium and Copper Contracts: Direct with producers (SQM, Albemarle, Codelco, Antofagasta Minerals)
  5. Salmon and Seafood: Direct with exporters (AquaChile, Multiexport, Camanchaca)

9. ECONOMIC IMPACT & STRATEGIC POSITION

A. Trade Balance Dynamics:

YearTrade Balance (US$ billion)
2022~15.0 (est.)
2023~14.5 (est.)
202414.80
2025 (Nov)1.24 (monthly)

2024 Performance:

  • Trade surplus: US$14.80 billion
  • Export value: US$101.0 billion
  • Import value: US$84.3 billion
  • Export-Import Coverage Ratio: 120%

B. Global Strategic Position:

  1. Copper Superpower: World’s largest copper producer (Codelco, Escondida)
  2. Lithium Dominance: World’s largest lithium producer (~80% market share)
  3. Salmon Leader: World’s 2nd largest salmon producer
  4. Fruit Powerhouse: Counter-seasonal supplier to Northern Hemisphere
  5. Mining Technology Leader: World-class mining engineering and services
  6. Trade Agreement Champion: 30+ FTAs covering 65+ markets
  7. Pacific Alliance Member: Strategic platform for Asia trade
  8. Stable Economy: One of Latin America’s most stable and prosperous

C. Competitiveness Indicators:

IndicatorValueGlobal Rank
Economic Complexity (Trade)-0.1572nd of 130
Economic Complexity (Technology)0.8626th of 96
Economic Complexity (Research)1.2622nd of 137
Exports Per CapitaUS$5,12060th globally
Imports Per CapitaUS$4,16090th globally
Ease of Doing Business59.259th (2019)

D. Challenges:

  1. Commodity Dependence: Copper, lithium, salmon subject to price volatility
  2. Limited Processing: Most exports are raw materials; value-added limited
  3. Water Scarcity: Mining and agriculture compete for water in northern regions
  4. Infrastructure Gaps: Southern connectivity, port modernization needs
  5. Climate Vulnerability: Agriculture dependent on water availability
  6. Geopolitical Risks: China dependence (33% of exports)

E. Opportunities:

  1. Lithium Downstream: Battery materials, cathode production
  2. Green Hydrogen: Massive potential from wind and solar (Magallanes)
  3. Renewable Energy: Solar (Atacama), wind (Patagonia)
  4. Mining Technology: Global leader in mining engineering exports
  5. Salmon Value-Added: Smoked, prepared products
  6. Agricultural Innovation: Premium fruit, organic products, counter-seasonal supply
  7. Services Exports: Fintech, software, engineering, consulting
  8. Digital Trade: Growing e-commerce and digital services
  9. Pacific Alliance Integration: Regional value chains
  10. CPTPP Expansion: New members joining

SUMMARY OF CHILE’S TRADE CHARACTERISTICS:

  1. Global Export Champion: 24 products ranked #1 worldwide, including copper, lithium, fresh cherries, frozen salmon fillets, iodine, and potassium nitrate
  2. Mineral Superpower: World’s largest copper and lithium producer; copper exports >US$20B, lithium carbonate accounts for ~80% of global market
  3. Salmon Leader: World’s 2nd largest salmon producer; leader in fresh and frozen fillets, trout, mussels
  4. Fruit Powerhouse: Counter-seasonal supplier to Northern Hemisphere; world’s largest cherry exporter
  5. Trade Agreement Champion: 30+ FTAs covering 65+ markets including US, China, EU, Japan, Korea, and CPTPP
  6. 2024-2025 Regulatory Reform: Ley 21.713/21.716 introduces US$500 duty-free threshold (effective October 2025), e-commerce VAT framework, temporary price declaration, and enhanced customs controls
  7. Trade Surplus Sustained: US$14.8 billion surplus in 2024; exports exceed US$100 billion for first time
  8. SME Export Growth: 53% of exporters are SMEs; 8,500+ exporting companies
  9. Top Trade Partners: China (33.7% of exports), US (14.4%), Japan (8.4%); imports from China (28.5%), US (19.0%), Brazil (8.9%)
  10. Trade Balance Leaders: China (+$17.7B surplus), Japan (+$6.32B), South Korea (+$3.09B); deficits with Argentina (-$5.75B), Germany (-$2.06B)

Chile represents one of the world’s most open and trade-oriented economies, combining resource superpower status in copper and lithium with global leadership in salmon, fruit, and niche industrial products. With 24 products ranking #1 globally in 2024, Chile has diversified beyond traditional mining into aquaculture, agriculture, and processed goods while maintaining dominance in critical minerals for the energy transition.

The 2024-2025 regulatory landscape saw major modernization: Ley 21.713/21.716 raises the de minimis threshold to US$500 (effective October 2025), establishes e-commerce VAT collection, enables temporary price declarations for commodities, and introduces joint customs-IRS advance pricing agreements. These reforms align Chile with global best practices while supporting e-commerce growth.

Chile’s extensive FTA network (30+ agreements covering 65 markets) provides unparalleled market access, with the US FTA (100% duty-free since 2015), China FTA (rapidly growing agricultural trade), and CPTPP membership positioning Chile as a platform for Asia-Pacific trade.

Chile’s trade future depends on capturing downstream value in lithium (battery materials), developing green hydrogen potential, expanding agricultural exports, and leveraging its stable economy and trade agreements to attract investment in renewable energy, technology, and services. The country’s strategic position as a Pacific Alliance leader and CPTPP member provides unique advantages in navigating global trade dynamics while maintaining its role as a reliable supplier of critical resources for the global economy.