Country exposure · GA

Gabon
Africa · Libreville · presidential republic
What Gabon means for your money — the prices you pay, the tariffs in motion, and where U.S. policy could change both.

$603M
U.S. imports, 2025
+252.2%
change in one year
$146M
U.S. exports, 2025
3M
Population
$20.9B
GDP
In your house
What you buy that Gabon makes
America bought $603M in goods from Gabon in 2025 — up 252.2% in a single year. Of every $100 of it, here's where the money went.
Crude oil
Fuel oil
fuel oil
Nonferrous metals, other
Plywood and veneers
Artwork, antiques, stamps, etc.
U.s. goods returned, and reimports
Lumber
lumber for homebuilding
Telecommunications equipment
phones, routers, networking gear
Chemicals-inorganic
Natural rubber
natural rubber for tires
2026 so far (through April): $155M in imports. Source: U.S. Census Bureau, International Trade in Goods (customs basis).
The other direction
What America sells to Gabon
$146M in 2025 — a trade rupture cuts both ways, for American producers as well as American prices.
Railway transportation equipment
$27MMeat, poultry, etc.
$17MIndustrial engines
$14MDrilling & oilfield equipment
$13MIndustrial machines, other
$11MPetroleum products, other
$6MElectric apparatus
$6MPassenger cars, new and used
$5Mnew and used cars
Measuring, testing, control instruments
$5MWhere you stand
U.S. tariff posture toward Gabon
No U.S. tariff action singles this country out. Its goods face the universal 10% temporary import surcharge under Section 122 of the Trade Act (which replaced the IEEPA reciprocal baseline in February 2026) plus the sectoral Section 232 duties — steel and aluminum at 50% — that apply to all countries. The Section 122 surcharge is statutorily temporary — scheduled to lapse on or about July 23, 2026 (a 150-day cap) unless extended or replaced.
Reciprocal tariff (universal baseline)
10%
The universal 10% floor — a Section 122 import surcharge since February 2026, previously the EO 14257 reciprocal baseline — applies to nearly all U.S. imports. This country has no higher assigned rate of its own.
Policy in motion
Tariff status: a moving target
No U.S. tariff action names Gabon. These are the universal measures — applied to every country without a country-specific arrangement — that set its treatment.
2026-04-06
Section 232 metals coverage expanded
In effectThe April 2026 proclamation strengthening Section 232 actions on aluminum, steel, and copper expanded derivative-product coverage for all countries, keeping the general metals rate at 50%.
91 FR 18201 →2026-02-24
IEEPA reciprocal tariffs terminated — replaced by 10% Section 122 surcharge
In effectExecutive Order 14389 (Ending Certain Tariff Actions) terminated the IEEPA tariff duties — including the EO 14257 reciprocal baseline — effective February 24, 2026. A flat 10% Section 122 temporary import surcharge (Proclamation 11012 of February 20, 2026) replaced them, leaving the universal rate unchanged at 10% on a different statutory basis. Section 122 caps such surcharges at 150 days, so this 10% surcharge is scheduled to lapse on or about July 23, 2026 absent further action (the administration has signaled it could raise the rate toward the 15% statutory maximum).
91 FR 9437 →2025-11-13
Agricultural products exempted from reciprocal tariffs
In effectExecutive Order 14360 of November 14, 2025 removed reciprocal duties from certain agricultural products listed in its annexes (coffee, cocoa, bananas, and other goods the U.S. does not produce in sufficient quantity), retroactive to November 13, 2025 — for all countries subject to the reciprocal tariff.
90 FR 54091 →2025-06-04
Section 232 steel and aluminum duties doubled to 50%
In effectThe June 3, 2025 proclamation raised Section 232 duties on steel and aluminum articles and derivatives from 25% to 50% for all countries, effective June 4, 2025.
90 FR 24199 →2025-04-05
Universal 10% reciprocal baseline takes effect
In effectExecutive Order 14257 (signed April 2, 2025) imposed a 10% ad valorem reciprocal duty on imports from all trading partners, effective April 5, 2025. Countries without a higher Annex I rate remain at this baseline.
Federal Register · 2025-06063 →2025-03-12
Section 232 steel and aluminum duties set at 25% for all countries
In effectProclamations of February 10, 2025 terminated all country exemptions and quota arrangements and applied 25% Section 232 duties to steel and aluminum imports from every country, effective March 12, 2025.
90 FR 9817 →
Made for America
What Gabon makes for America
Gabon is a direct U.S. source of 2 essential goods Americans rely on — the items themselves, shipped finished off the line.
Go deeper
The supply chain view
Gabon sits upstream of 2 essential American goods through 2 tracked inputs.
Full supply-map profile →Reference
The country itself
Africa · Geography, people, economy, and government — public-domain data from the CIA World Factbook.
Gabon, a sparsely populated country known for its dense rainforests and vast petroleum reserves, is one of the most prosperous and stable countries in central Africa. Approximately 40 ethnic groups are represented, the largest of which is the Fang, a group that covers the northern third of Gabon and expands north into Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon. From about the early 1300s, various kingdoms emerged in present-day Gabon and the surrounding area, including the Kingdoms of Loango and Orungu. Because most early Bantu languages spoken in these kingdoms did not have a written form, much of Gabon's early history was lost over time. Portuguese traders who arrived in the mid-1400s gave the area its name of Gabon. At that time, indigenous trade networks began to engage with European traders, exchanging goods such as ivory and wood. For a century beginning in the 1760s, trade came to focus mostly on enslaved people. While many groups in Gabon participated in the slave trade, the Fang were a notable exception. As the slave trade declined in the late 1800s, France colonized the country and directed a widespread extraction of Gabonese resources. Anti-colonial rhetoric by Gabon’s educated elites increased significantly in the early 1900s, but no widespread rebellion materialized. French decolonization after World War II led to the country’s independence in 1960. Within a year of independence, the government changed from a parliamentary to a presidential system, and Leon M’BA won the first presidential election in 1961. El Hadj Omar BONGO Ondimba was M’BA’s vice president and assumed the presidency after M’BA’s death in 1967. BONGO went on to dominate the country's political scene for four decades (1967-2009). In 1968, he declared Gabon a single-party state and created the still-dominant Parti Democratique Gabonais (PDG). In the early 1990s, he reintroduced a multiparty system under a new constitution in response to growing political opposition. He was reelected by wide margins in 1995, 1998, 2002, and 2005 against a divided opposition and amidst allegations of fraud. After BONGO's death in 2009, a new election brought his son, Ali BONGO Ondimba, to power, and he was reelected in 2016. He won a third term in the August 2023 election but was overthrown in a military coup a few days later. Gen. Brice OLIGUI Nguema led a military group called the Committee for the Transition and Restoration of Institutions that arrested BONGO, canceled the election results, and dissolved state institutions. In September 2023, OLIGUI was sworn in as transitional president of Gabon.

Geography
- Location
- Central Africa, bordering the Atlantic Ocean at the Equator, between Republic of the Congo and Equatorial Guinea
- Area
- 267,667 sq km
- Climate
- tropical; always hot, humid
- Terrain
- narrow coastal plain; hilly interior; savanna in east and south
- Natural resources
- petroleum, natural gas, diamond, niobium, manganese, uranium, gold, timber, iron ore, hydropower
- Coastline
- 885 km
- Natural hazards
- none
People & society
- Population
- 2,513,738 (2025 est.)
- Nationality
- Gabonese (singular and plural)
- Ethnic groups
- Fang 23.5%, Shira-Punu'Vii 20.6%, Nzabi-Duma 11.2%, Mbede-Teke 5.6%, Myene 4.4%, Kota-Kele 4.3%, Okande-Tsogho 1.6%, other 12.6%, foreigner 16.2% (2021 est.)
- Languages
- French (official), Fang, Myene, Nzebi, Bapounou/Eschira, Bandjabi
- Religions
- Protestant 46.4% (Revival Church 37%, other Protestant 9.4%), Roman Catholic 29.8%, other Christian 4%, Muslim 10.8%, traditional/animist 1.1%, other 0.9%, none 7% (2019-21 est.)
- Median age
- 22.3 years (2025 est.)
- Life expectancy at birth
- 70.4 years (2024 est.)
- Literacy
- 88.9% (2021 est.)
Economy
- Economic overview
- natural-resource-rich, upper-middle-income, Central African economy; significant reliance on oil and mineral exports; highly urbanized population; high levels of poverty and unemployment; uncertainty on institutional and development reform progress following 2023 military coup
- Industries
- petroleum extraction and refining; manganese, gold; chemicals, ship repair, food and beverages, textiles, lumbering and plywood, cement
- Agricultural products
- oil palm fruit, plantains, cassava, sugarcane, yams, taro, vegetables, maize, groundnuts, game meat (2023)
- Exports - partners
- China 26%, Indonesia 8%, Spain 7%, Israel 6%, Congo, Republic of the 5% (2023)
- Imports - partners
- France 14%, China 13%, S. Korea 13%, USA 7%, India 4% (2023)
Government
- Government type
- presidential republic
- Capital
- Libreville
- Independence
- 17 August 1960 (from France)
- Constitution
- previous 1961, 1991; latest approved in November 2024 referendum
- Executive branch
- President Brice OLIGUI Nguema (since 3 May 2025)
- Legislative branch
- Parliament
Full reference data
Every field, by section — CIA World Factbook. Open a topic to expand it.
Introduction
Travel Facts
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Page last updated: Wednesday, July 20, 2022