2025 Economic Impact Report

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Delivering the future

FedEx expands to every corner of the world, connecting people and possibilities by creating economic growth and opportunities across communities. We call this impact the FedEx Effect. Our latest Economic Impact Report examines this effect as well as the strategies, assets, and team members that enable us to serve more than 220 countries and territories.

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$126B

The combined direct and indirect contributions from FedEx to the global economy totaled approximately $126 billion in FY25.

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100,000

In calendar year 2024, FedEx partnered with 100,000 suppliers, 90% of which are small- and medium-sized businesses. This boosted economic growth and local job creation through our extensive supply chain.

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$2T

As the largest industrial network, FedEx transports over $2 trillion in goods each year and keeps the world's healthcare, manufacturing, and telecommunications supply chains moving.

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Discover FedEx around the world

Click through the subpages for each of our operating regions — the United States, the Americas, Europe, Asia Pacific (APAC), and the Middle East, Indian Subcontinent, and Africa (MEISA) — to learn more about how FedEx creates impact at a local level.

The Americas

From Brazil to Ontario, Mexico to Peru, and everywhere in between, FedEx has an expansive presence across North and South America.

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The United States

With its global headquarters in Memphis, Tennessee, FedEx delivers to every U.S. ZIP code, connecting communities and customers in every corner of the country.

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Europe

Powered by our hub in Paris and a network that spans 45 countries across the continent, FedEx links Europe to markets around the corner and across the globe.

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Asia Pacific (APAC)

FedEx plays a critical role in facilitating commerce across the Asia Pacific, connecting the region’s 43 countries to customers worldwide.

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Middle East, Indian Subcontinent, and Africa (MEISA)

Headquartered in Dubai, FedEx is dedicated to helping the region of more than 80 countries grow and reach new customers.

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The Global FedEx Effect

FedEx serves more than 220 countries and territories globally and every ZIP code in the United States. Click to explore various locations around the world where FedEx is fueling innovation, supporting small businesses, and helping to lift individuals and their communities.

Impacts through the extended supply chain

FedEx spending with its suppliers creates additional economic activity along the company’s extended supply chain, as direct FedEx suppliers (known as tier one suppliers) must purchase components, goods, and services from their own vendors (known as tier two suppliers). Tier two suppliers, in turn, rely on their own network of vendors for goods, services, and components (known as tier three suppliers).

Here is how a FedEx purchase of handheld scanners stimulates additional spending through tier two and tier three suppliers, and beyond.

FedEx purchases handheld scanners for Europe and U.S. operations through the technology solutions provider Peak Technologies (tier one supplier). Peak Technologies sources those devices from manufacturers like Zebra and Honeywell (tier two suppliers). To make the handheld devices, Zebra and Honeywell purchase components such as central processing units (CPUs), cameras, and LEDs from their own suppliers. For example, one scanner model uses a CPU sourced from Qualcomm (tier three supplier), which outsources production of the chips to TSMC (tier four supplier).

In this way, each FedEx purchase of a handheld scanner stimulates business activity at a number of additional companies, from the direct supplier to the device manufacturers, and ultimately the various component makers who supply the parts needed during the production process.

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Explore previous reports

Read past editions of our Economic Impact Report.

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