The textile market of South America is projected to grow at a CAGR of 6.5% and reach around US $72.3 billion by 2035 from $38.5 billion in 2025.
South America’s textile sector spans the full production chain beginning from cotton cultivation and processing to finished apparel and technical fabrics.
The market encompasses synthetic and natural fibre manufacturing, weaving and knitting operations, and end use applications from fashion to industrial filtration.
Synthetic fibers command 56.3% of raw material supply, reflecting a structural shift away from exclusively natural-fiber dependency.
This shift lowers input cost volatility and allows manufacturers to respond faster to global fashion cycles.
Consequently, facilities producing polyester and recycled variants hold a structural cost advantage over natural fibre only operations.
Fashion and apparel absorbs 62.9% of total textile output, confirming that consumer-facing demand remains the primary revenue engine.
However, industrial and technical textiles represent the higher-margin growth segment, as infrastructure investment and mining activity across the region creates durable demand.
“Brazil anchors regional output, supported by Argentina, Colombia, and Peru. Brazil’s regulatory posture directly shapes market economics,” Market.US informed in a report.
Brazil launched its National Circular Economy Strategy in 2024, mandating textile manufacturers to promote material reuse and reduce production waste.
This positions Brazilian producer’s favourably with global buyers who apply sustainability criteria to sourcing decisions — a competitive signal that extends beyond domestic compliance.
According to ITMF’s Global Textile Industry Survey of January 2026, South America’s business confidence balance reached a positive nine percentage points — the highest among all surveyed regions globally.
This outperformance signals that regional manufacturers perceive forward order books and production conditions more positively than peers in South-East Asia, which posted a negative two percentage points in the same survey.
U.S. tariff exemptions introduced in 2025 for recycled textile inputs directly benefit South American exporters with closed-loop manufacturing capabilities.
Moreover, countries demonstrating supply chain sustainability receive fast-tracked customs clearance, creating a measurable trade cost advantage for compliant regional producers.
Image courtesy: market.us

