
E-commerce volumes from China to the US have decreased, while volumes from China to Europe have increased, new research has found.
For the period May-July, the US receieved 15% of China’s e-commerce exports. This is down 16% from the same period last year, displays data from supply chain consultancy firm, Aevean.
E-commerce volumes have shifted to Europe. The region received 27% of exports from May-July, up 6% year on year.
Hungary, Belgium and the UK now receive 53,000 tonnes combined, stated Maarten Wormer, head of consulting in a LinkedIn post on 25 August.
“Europe’s top 3 destinations toobtainher welcome ±6 daily widebody freighters worth of e-commerce MORE in 2025 May-Jul than one year ago,” he stated.
The share of ex-China e-commerce to other regions has also risen from 48% to 57%.

E-commerce volumes from China to the US launched declining in May after the US govenment rerelocated the de minimis exemption that allowed packages worth less than $800 to enter duty-free and with minimal customs scrutiny.
The removal of the exemption means packages from China transported by a commercial airline will necessary to pay a 30% tariff rate, or, when applying postal networks, they will be subject to a rate of 54% or a flat fee of $100.
A whitepaper recently released by TIACA also found that Asia Pacific has become a greater origin point for e-commerce air cargo volumes following US tariff and de minimis modifys that curbed e-commerce out of China.











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