Current Account Balance by Country

Latest released Current Account Balance value for every supported currency, with the previous reading, the change between releases, reference date, frequency, unit, and source.

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Economy
Current Account Balance across supported currencies

Measures trade in goods and services and income flows.

Updated 04 May 2026 07:22 UTC.
9 with data 9 supported currencies
Each row links to the per-currency reference page and the underlying API endpoint at /api/v1/announcements/{currency}/current_account_balance. Non-USD endpoints require an API key query parameter.
Country / Currency Latest Previous Change Reference Frequency Unit Source
Switzerland
CHF · Swiss Franc
129,378.13
31 Dec 2025
118,738.23
30 Sep 2025
▲ +10,639.9 31 Dec 2025 Quarterly CHF mn SNB/FSO
Japan
JPY · Japanese Yen
39,326.76
28 Feb 2026
9,309.52
31 Jan 2026
▲ +30,017.244 28 Feb 2026 Monthly JPY bn BoJ/Statistics Japan
Eurozone
EUR · Euro
14,570.05
01 Dec 2025
8,907.78
01 Nov 2025
▲ +5,662.274 01 Dec 2025 Quarterly EUR billions ECB/Eurostat
Brazil
BRL · Brazilian Real
-66.717
31 Jan 2025
-66.717
31 Jan 2025
● 0 31 Jan 2025 Quarterly USD bn BCB SGS
Canada
CAD · Canadian Dollar
-706
31 Dec 2025
-5,272
30 Sep 2025
▲ +4,566 31 Dec 2025 Quarterly CAD mn Bank of Canada/StatCan
New Zealand
NZD · New Zealand Dollar
-5,984
31 Dec 2025
-8,357
30 Sep 2025
▲ +2,373 31 Dec 2025 Quarterly NZD mn RBNZ/Stats NZ
United Kingdom
GBP · British Pound
-18,392
31 Dec 2025
-10,689
30 Sep 2025
▼ -7,703 31 Dec 2025 Quarterly Millions of GBP ONS
Australia
AUD · Australian Dollar
-21,093
31 Dec 2025
-18,340
30 Sep 2025
▼ -2,753 31 Dec 2025 Quarterly AUD mn ABS/RBA
United States
USD · US Dollar
-190,745
31 Dec 2025
-239,142
30 Sep 2025
▲ +48,397 31 Dec 2025 Quarterly Billions of USD FRED (BEA)

What is Current Account Balance?

The current account is the broadest measure of a country's external position — trade in goods and services, plus net primary income (interest, dividends, wages earned abroad), plus net secondary income (remittances, foreign aid). It is essentially a country's net saving versus the rest of the world.

Why it matters for FX

Persistent current-account deficits must be funded by capital inflows, which makes a country's currency more sensitive to global risk sentiment. Surplus countries are exporters of capital and their currencies tend to act as funding currencies or safe havens (JPY, CHF historically). Sudden shifts in the current account can be a leading indicator of FX regime change.

How to read this page

Read as a share of GDP, not in nominal currency terms. A deficit above 4-5 percent of GDP is historically a warning sign for emerging-market currencies. Cross-reference with trade_balance and net international investment position data.

What to watch for

  • Current-account-to-GDP ratio (not the nominal level)
  • Funding mix: portfolio flows vs FDI
  • Income balance dynamics for large net-foreign-asset holders
  • Energy trade flipping the balance (Norway, UK, Australia)
  • Sudden-stop risk for high-deficit emerging markets