Samsung Economics: US Imports & Trade Analysis
Samsung Electronics is a global leader in smartphones, TVs, displays, and semiconductors. This trade analysis uses US Customs import data to trace Samsung Electronics America's supply chain: which countries supply electronics and components, which carriers move them, and how Samsung imports have evolved. We examine the economics of Samsung's US trade.
Explore the interactive import data below. Adjust the date range to analyze Samsung economics and supply chain trends.
Company History & Supply Chain
Samsung Electronics is part of the Samsung Group, founded in South Korea in 1969. The electronics division manufactures smartphones, TVs, displays, memory chips, and appliances. Samsung Electronics America handles US sales and distribution. Manufacturing is concentrated in Korea, Vietnam, China, and India, with components sourced globally.
What they offshore
Samsung manufactures refrigerators, washing machines, TVs, and electronics in Korea (Samsung Electronics Co), Thailand (Thai Samsung), Vietnam (HCMC CE Complex), Mexico, and Malaysia. The import data shows appliances dominate (60,000+ refrigerator shipments), plus electronic parts, machinery, and automotive components. Ocean shipments flow from Asian and Mexican factories to US distribution.
What stays in the USA
Samsung Electronics America manages US sales, marketing, and distribution. The company has R&D centers and some assembly operations in the US. Samsung has invested in US semiconductor fabs (e.g., Texas). Retail, logistics, and customer support are domestic.
Data vs. Marketing: What the Import Records Show
Marketed: Innovation, quality, global scale. Import data (2021–2025): US Customs records show 187,674 shipments. Top products: refrigerators (60,833), electronic parts (15,566), automotive (14,157), machinery (13,663), washing machines (7,965). Top suppliers: Samsung Electronics Korea (113,353), Thai Samsung Electronics (41,187), Samsung Digital Appliance (11,470), Samsung HCMC Vietnam (5,853), Samsung Mexico (2,320), Samsung Malaysia (1,722). Origin countries: Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Mexico, Malaysia, China. The data reveals Samsung's dual focus: consumer appliances (fridges, washers) and electronics, with production spread across Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, and Mexico. The import volume dwarfs most other tech importers in the dataset.
Samsung Import Data: Trade Analysis
US Customs import records: suppliers by country, carriers, origin countries, and shipment volumes. Adjust the date range to analyze Samsung economics and supply chain trends.
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Key Findings from the Samsung Import Data
US Customs import records for Samsung Electronics America show 187,674 shipments from 296 suppliers across 1,514 product types. The product breakdown is dominated by refrigerators (60,833 shipments), electronic parts (15,566), automotive components (14,157), machinery (13,663), and washing machines (7,965). Top suppliers are Samsung Electronics Korea (113,353 shipments), Thai Samsung Electronics (41,187), Samsung Digital Appliance (11,470), Samsung HCMC Vietnam (5,853), Samsung Mexico (2,320), and Samsung Malaysia (1,722). The origin-country and trade map data show Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Mexico, and Malaysia as the main sourcing regions. Port routes span Laem Chabang, Pusan, Shanghai, Yantian, and Mexican ports to US gateways including Long Beach, Savannah, Newark, and Houston.
Samsung import data reveals a dual focus on consumer appliances (refrigerators, washing machines) and electronics, with production spread across Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, and Mexico. The shipment volume far exceeds most other tech importers in the dataset. Researchers analyzing appliance and electronics supply chains can use this data to trace Samsung's sourcing geography, carrier preferences, and US port-routing patterns.