Egyptian diaspora remittances climbed to a record $41.5 billion in 2025, according to confirmation from the Central Bank, marking one of the strongest external support variables for the country’s economy in recent years.
The milestone comes amid ongoing macroeconomic reforms, currency adjustment measures and efforts to stabilise foreign exchange liquidity. Remittances remain Egypt’s single largest source of foreign currency inflows, surpassing revenues from tourism, Suez Canal receipts and many export segments.
In an environment of external financing pressures and elevated import needs, the scale of remittance inflows provides significant macro stabilisation. Higher foreign currency receipts help:
• Strengthen reserve buffers
• Support exchange rate management
• Ease balance-of-payments pressures
• Improve confidence in monetary policy
The rebound in remittances also reflects improved foreign exchange flexibility following recent policy shifts, which reduced the gap between official and parallel market rates and encouraged flows through formal banking channels.
Egypt has one of the largest diasporas in the Middle East and Europe, with substantial labour migration to Gulf economies. Remittance resilience therefore remains closely tied to Gulf labour demand, oil price cycles and global employment conditions.
The 2025 record suggests that external labour markets remained supportive and that domestic financial channels regained credibility.
Record remittance inflows provide breathing room for structural reforms, including fiscal consolidation and private-sector development. However, reliance on remittances also underscores exposure to external labour market shifts.
For investors, the figure signals strengthening external accounts — but sustainability will depend on continued policy discipline, export growth and capital inflows.
For now, the data reinforce a key macro reality: diaspora capital remains central to Egypt’s financial stability architecture.
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