Malawi’s tobacco revenue rose by 37 percent in the latest marketing season, reaching approximately $540 million compared to $394 million a year earlier, underscoring the sector’s resilience despite weaker global prices. The figures, released in April 2026 by the Tobacco Commission, highlight strong performance from the country’s top export commodity, as reported by CNBC Africa.
The increase was largely driven by higher sales volumes, with farmers bringing more leaf to market following improved production conditions. This helped offset a decline in average prices per kilogram, reflecting softer demand dynamics in some global markets and pricing pressures across the tobacco supply chain.
Tobacco remains Malawi’s largest foreign exchange earner, accounting for a significant share of export revenues and supporting millions of livelihoods across the agricultural sector. Officials say the strong season reflects both improved crop yields and ongoing efforts to formalise trading systems and boost efficiency in auction and contract sales.
The performance highlights Malawi’s continued reliance on tobacco even as global demand faces structural headwinds. While rising volumes have sustained revenue growth in the short term, the trend underscores the need for diversification to safeguard long-term economic stability in an increasingly shifting global commodities market.

