The UK's Trade Agreements – Interactive Maps (Updated 2023)

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Following Brexit, the UK Government is keen to boost trade with countries outside the EU. Our interactive maps show the extent of the UK's global network of free trade agreements and bilateral investment treaties.

United Kingdom International Law

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OVERVIEW

Last updated August 2023. In particular, the trade agreements map has been updated to reflect the UK's planned accession to the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) and the countries that the UK is currently in talks with to establish new trade agreements or improve existing arrangements

FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS

The UK currently has free trade agreements in force with over 60 countries and is in the process of negotiating new trade agreements with a number of other territories. See the notes below for further explanation relating to this interactive map. The map allows you to zoom in on a particular geographic area. You can also look up a particular country by using the search box at the top left of the map.

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Notes on the interactive map

When you click on a country with which the UK either has a free trade agreement or is in negotiations to conclude one, you can access additional information about that country as follows:

New trade agreements

In 2023, new post-Brexit UK trade agreements came into force with Australia and New Zealand. The map indicates a number of other countries with which the UK is in the process of negotiating entirely new trade agreements (coloured light green). These include:

The UK is also looking to expand its existing continuity trade agreements with Canada, Israel, Mexico, South Korea and Switzerland (these countries are coloured dark green because there is already a trade agreement in place with the UK; the negotiations are aimed at improving and updating it). Finally, the UK has negotiated digital trade agreements with a number of territories including Singapore and Ukraine. These typically supplement the existing trade arrangements.

CPTPP membership

In March 2023, the UK Government announced that negotiations for the UK to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) had "substantially concluded". However, the CPTPP is not yet in force as regards trade between member countries and the UK; it will not take effect until all members have completed relevant legislative processes.

The UK's accession will take the total membership of the group to 12 states. The problem with displaying these on the map is that the UK already has bilateral trade agreements with 9 of the CPTPP's current members (Australia, Canada, Chile, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam). For these countries, CPTPP membership is not indicated through use of a different colour, but in the Additional Notes field for the relevant country. The only other current CPTPP members are Brunei Darussalam and Malaysia. As the UK does not have existing bilateral trade agreements with these 2 countries, we have changed the colour coding to reflect the impact of the UK acceding to the CPTPP.

BILATERAL INVESTMENT TREATIES

As highlighted by our interactive map, the UK has an extensive network of BITs. This makes it a potentially attractive jurisdiction for incorporating investment vehicles which can then be used to invest in countries with which the UK has concluded a BIT. However, the BIT must have been brought into force - and the actual terms of the relevant BIT should always be reviewed to ascertain the level of protection offered. Some of the countries with which the UK has BITs are very small, but the map allows you to zoom in on particular geographic areas. You can also look up a particular country by using the search box at the top left of the map.

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