With two of the most heavily trafficked business hubs in the world in Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston, Texas reaches every part of the global economy. As the leading exporting state, over 39,000 Texan companies and over 3.6 million Texan workers support exports. In 2023, Texas shipped more than $444 billion worth of goods to overseas markets.

Job Creation

  • In Texas, 3,622,500 jobs were supported by trade, representing 20.1% of all jobs in the state.1,2
  • In 2022, 39,889 companies exported goods from Texas of which 93% were small- and medium-sized enterprises. In 2021, 660,500 people were employed by affiliates of companies at least 50% foreign-owned.3,4

Exports and Growth

  • Texas exported $444.6 billion in goods to foreign markets in 2023. Texas’s largest markets were:5
    • Mexico ($129.5 billion)
    • Canada ($35.9 billion)
    • Netherlands ($26.6 billion)
    • China ($26.5 billion)
    • South Korea ($21.1 billion)
  • Agricultural exports are important to Texas' economy, totaling $8.5 billion in 2022, according to the USDA.6
  • Since 2014, the U.S. Export-Import Bank has financed $16 billion in exports from 935 companies in Texas.7
  • The Millennium Challenge Corporation has provided $6.4 million in funding to Texas organizations since the agency's inception in 2004.8
  • Since 1992, the U.S. Trade and Development Agency has helped facilitate $5.8 billion in exports from Texas companies.9

Education and Research

  • From 2022-2023, 80,757 international students were enrolled in Texas colleges and universities and contributed $2.2 billion to the Texas economy.10

Global Engagement

  • Since 1961, 8,154 Peace Corps volunteers from Texas have served in dozens of countries overseas.11