Brazil shipped 17,283 tonnes of peanuts to Mexico in 2025, nearly quadrupling the long-run average and rewriting this trade lane's historical benchmark.
Brazil exported 17,283 tonnes of raw peanuts to Mexico in 2025. That volume is roughly 4 times the corridor's historical annual average of 3,766 tonnes. It also places 2025 at the top of the series tracked by MDIC ComexStat for this trade lane, well above any prior year on record.
Mexico is not traditionally a major buyer of Brazilian peanuts. The main destinations have long been Europe and Southeast Asia. Seeing Mexico appear at this scale demands an explanation beyond routine seasonality.
One credible hypothesis is the reshuffling of North American food supply chains. Mexico is a consolidated food processing hub serving the US market. With tariff and logistics pressure on US peanut supply during 2024 and 2025, Mexican buyers may have sought alternative sources. Brazil, coming off a record peanut harvest in its 2024/25 crop season, offered competitive pricing and immediate availability.
Exchange rates helped. With the real weakened against the dollar throughout 2025, Brazilian peanuts became cheaper in dollar terms. That strengthens competitiveness against Argentine suppliers, whose currency moved differently. BACEN PTAX logged periods of real weakness that typically prompt Brazilian agro exporters to lock in contracts with new buyers.
Brazil's harvest seasonality also matters. The main peanut crop runs from March to June, with a secondary window in September through November. The full-year volume in 2025 suggests at least part of the shipments was contracted during peak-supply periods, when export prices compress and arbitrage with alternative markets becomes more attractive.
Brazilian peanut acreage has expanded steadily since 2018, driven by strong returns in the second-crop cycle, mainly in São Paulo and Goiás. Industry groups indicate Brazil is now among the world's largest exporters of shelled peanuts, competing with Argentina and the United States for global market share.
An existing Mercosur-Mexico trade framework facilitates part of this flow. The competitive edge, though, is primarily pricing and scale rather than preferential tariff access. Peanuts do not benefit from full tariff elimination in this corridor. That makes the 2025 volume more notable: it was won without significant tariff protection. Brazilian port infrastructure at Paranaguá and Santos handled the increased volume without reported bottlenecks.
The Brazil-Mexico peanut corridor was historically minor. The 2025 spike could reflect two distinct scenarios. The first is a large one-off purchase by a single Mexican processor that seized a pricing opportunity. The second is the start of a recurring commercial relationship. Without 2026 YTD data, it is too early to determine which scenario holds. The answer matters for how Brazilian exporters should price and structure future offers to Mexican buyers.
For the producing sector, the signal is meaningful regardless of the outcome. Mexico absorbed the equivalent of nearly an entire mid-size Brazilian producing state's annual output through a single corridor that barely registered before. That changes the destination-concentration risk map for Brazilian peanut exporters. It also raises the question of whether existing commercial infrastructure — sales agents, quality certifications, phytosanitary approvals — is adequate to support a permanent commercial presence in Mexico.
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