The fourth quarter of 2025 delivered one of the most consequential periods of growth for the Abraham Accords since the historic peace agreements were brokered by President Trump in 2020. Trade between Israel and every one of its Accords partners increased in Q4, driven by deepening diplomatic ties, landmark energy and defense deals, and a dramatic surge in cross-border technology investment. New data released by The Heritage Foundation — tracking the bilateral trade figures published by Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics — puts flesh on the bones of a peace framework that continues to confound its critics.

The quarter opened with a Gaza ceasefire brokered by President Trump, creating the conditions for renewed regional cooperation. It closed with Kazakhstan formally acceding to the Accords in November — the first formal expansion since Trump’s first term — and with Israel establishing diplomatic relations with Somaliland in December. The full Q4 2025 Abraham Accords Report from The Heritage Foundation provides comprehensive analysis of these developments.

$3.2B Israel–UAE annual trade in 2025
431% Year-over-year surge in cross-border private tech funding
$36B Natural gas agreement — Israel, Egypt & U.S. partners
$2.3B Elbit Systems air defense contract with the UAE

🔍 Interactive Trade Dashboard — Israel Bilateral Trade, Q4 2025

Source: Heritage Foundation · Israel Central Bureau of Statistics
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United Arab Emirates

Israel’s Largest Abraham Accords Trade Partner
$321.4M ▲ +32% December 2025
vs. Dec 2024
$900.3M ▲ +9% Q4 2025
vs. Q4 2024
$3.2B ▼ −1% Full Year 2025
vs. 2024
Trade Volume Comparison (relative scale)
Dec 2024
$243M
Dec 2025
$321M ▲32%
Q4 2024
$826M
Q4 2025
$900M ▲9%
FY 2024
$3.23B
FY 2025
$3.20B ▼1%
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Jordan

Strongest Annual Growth Among Accords Partners
$62M ▲ +42% December 2025
vs. Dec 2024
$158.6M ▲ +38% Q4 2025
vs. Q4 2024
$637.6M ▲ +34% Full Year 2025
vs. 2024
Trade Volume Comparison (relative scale)
Dec 2024
$43.7M
Dec 2025
$62M ▲42%
Q4 2024
$114.9M
Q4 2025
$158.6M ▲38%
FY 2024
$476M
FY 2025
$637.6M ▲34%
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Egypt

Q4 Growth Despite Annual Dip; Key Gas Deal Partner
$54.1M ▼ −8% December 2025
vs. Dec 2024
$156.2M ▲ +3% Q4 2025
vs. Q4 2024
$560.5M ▼ −3% Full Year 2025
vs. 2024
Trade Volume Comparison (relative scale)
Dec 2024
$58.8M
Dec 2025
$54.1M ▼8%
Q4 2024
$151.7M
Q4 2025
$156.2M ▲3%
FY 2024
$577M
FY 2025
$560.5M ▼3%
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Morocco

Strong Growth Across All Periods
$23.4M ▲ +25% December 2025
vs. Dec 2024
$47.2M ▲ +65% Q4 2025
vs. Q4 2024
$128.2M ▲ +17% Full Year 2025
vs. 2024
Trade Volume Comparison (relative scale)
Dec 2024
$18.7M
Dec 2025
$23.4M ▲25%
Q4 2024
$28.6M
Q4 2025
$47.2M ▲65%
FY 2024
$109.6M
FY 2025
$128.2M ▲17%
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Bahrain

Explosive Q4 Growth from Low Base
$2.3M ▲ +1,050% December 2025
vs. Dec 2024
$11.2M ▲ +1,300% Q4 2025
vs. Q4 2024
$21.2M ▼ −80% Full Year 2025
vs. 2024
Trade Volume Comparison (relative scale — note: scale differs from other partners)
Dec 2024
$0.2M
Dec 2025
$2.3M ▲1050%
Q4 2024
$0.8M
Q4 2025
$11.2M ▲1300%
FY 2024
$105.7M
FY 2025
$21.2M ▼80%

A Quarter of Historic Milestones

Q4 2025 Key Developments

OCT Gaza ceasefire brokered by President Trump enters into effect, creating conditions for renewed regional cooperation and Accords momentum.
OCT $2.3 billion Elbit Systems contract signed to provide strategic air defense solutions to the UAE — a landmark milestone in Israel-UAE defense cooperation.
OCT Pax Silica summit launches, uniting Israel and the UAE in a new U.S. State Department-led framework for AI supply chain coordination. Both countries are founding members.
NOV Kazakhstan formally accedes to the Abraham Accords — the first expansion of the Accords since President Trump’s first term, with potential domino-effect implications for other Muslim-majority states.
DEC Israel and Somaliland establish formal diplomatic relations, extending the Accords’ reach into the Horn of Africa.
2025 $36 billion natural gas agreement approved between Israel, Egypt, and American partners — anchoring energy security cooperation at the heart of the Accords’ economic architecture.
2025 StartUp Nation Central research documents a 431% year-over-year surge in cross-border private tech funding between Israel and Accords member countries.

From Treaties to Architecture

Robert Greenway, who authored the Heritage Foundation’s quarterly overview, frames the Q4 data as evidence that the Accords have evolved well beyond their origins as bilateral normalization treaties. The integration of the Accords into multilateral frameworks — including IMEC’s India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor and the AI-focused Pax Silica initiative — means that the agreements are now embedded in the broader architecture of American economic and technological leadership in the region, serving as a deliberate counterweight to Chinese-dominated frameworks.

There is an opportunity to build on the positive developments of Q4 in ways that align with vital U.S. economic and geostrategic interests.

— Robert Greenway, The Heritage Foundation

The newly established Board of Peace, created by President Trump, is expected to play a facilitating role in advancing joint projects involving the United States, Israel, and Arab and Muslim partners. Heritage analysts argue that the coming months will be critical for both bilateral normalization — pushing Saudi Arabia, among others, toward formal Accords membership — and the deepening of American-led multilateral engagement across the MENA region.

Reading the Numbers

The country-by-country data reveals a nuanced picture. Jordan’s 34% annual growth in trade with Israel is the standout story of 2025 as a whole, reflecting deepening economic integration between two countries that have maintained a peace treaty since 1994 but whose economic relationship has been transformed by the Accords framework. Morocco’s 65% surge in Q4 trade alone speaks to accelerating normalisation. The UAE, while posting a marginal 1% annual decline, remains by far the largest trading partner — sustaining over $3.2 billion in annual bilateral trade despite regional headwinds — and its December month was up 32% year-on-year.

Bahrain’s figures require context: an 80% annual decline reflects an unusual spike in 2024 from which 2025 comparisons are unflattering, while the 1,300% Q4 jump signals a significant resumption of activity. Egypt’s modest 3% Q4 growth, despite a small annual dip, is buoyed by its central role in the $36 billion natural gas agreement — a deal whose full economic weight will be felt in years ahead.

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Full trade data, interactive visualisations, and the complete Q4 2025 Abraham Accords Report are available at Heritage Foundation’s Abraham Accords Trade tracker and in the Q4 2025 PDF Report. Data sourced from the State of Israel Central Bureau of Statistics Foreign Trade Statistics Monthly.