Key takeaways
- Peru's metal-mechanic exports cleared US$750.2 million in 2024, a modest 3.7% gain, signalling a real but still-small base where supplier selection matters more than country selection.
- The market is concentrated and uneven: in 2024 the top ten firms held about 42% of export value, led by Resemin at US$86.9M (11.58%) and Modasa at US$69.4M (9.26%), with Ferreyros, AGP Peru, Fundicion Chilca and Metalpren next, so the long tail of smaller workshops varies widely in capacity and certification.
- Demand is overwhelmingly regional: eight of the ten top destinations are Latin American, with Chile and the United States together taking more than US$300M in Jan-Nov 2025, both growing double digits.
"Made in Peru" tells you almost nothing about the plant behind it
Peru's metal-mechanic catalogue spans mining drills, generator sets, fabricated steel structures, hand and machine tools, fasteners, and copper and aluminium wire and cable. That breadth is the opportunity and the trap. A single product code can come from a fully certified, export-grade plant or from a small workshop that has never shipped abroad, and the export label looks identical on paper.
The numbers expose how lopsided the base is. In 2024 the sector exported roughly US$750.2 million, yet the ten largest firms accounted for about 42% of that value, with Resemin (US$86.9M) and Modasa (US$69.4M) alone near 21%. Below that concentrated head sits a long tail of producers whose welding standards, materials traceability, lead times, and quality systems differ enormously from one shop to the next.
For a foreign buyer sourcing structures, tooling, or wire and cable, the practical question is never "can Peru make this" but "which of these suppliers can actually hold tolerance, certify the steel, and ship on schedule." Get that wrong and you inherit rework, rejected lots, and slipped project timelines that dwarf any unit-price saving.
A concentrated head: the largest exporters carry most of the value
Top ten firms hold roughly 42% of total export value
Resemin alone is about 11.6% of the sector
Source: Peru Sourcing Partners analysis
Why Peru is increasingly worth the look for industrial buyers
Peru's metal-mechanic exporters have built real momentum. Shipments grew 3.7% in 2024 to US$750.2 million, and the Jan-Nov 2025 run-rate of US$727 million points to a faster year, with the sector association estimating high-single-digit growth as plants run near 85% capacity. Much of that capability is anchored in mining-grade engineering, where Peru's domestic industry has decades of experience supplying demanding underground operations.
Demand is also pulling exporters outward as a deliberate strategy against low-priced Chinese competition. Producers are leaning into markets such as Chile, the United States, Colombia and Argentina, where regulation of very cheap imports and active mining and construction pipelines reward certified, regional suppliers. Chile alone took US$170M in Jan-Nov 2025 (up 30.6%) and the United States US$148M (up 15.9%), evidence that buyers in regulated, quality-sensitive markets are already validating Peru's better plants.
Fabricated metal structures account for an estimated 70% of the country's metal-mechanic activity, giving buyers a deep bench for project steel, plus specialised lines in drilling equipment, gensets, and metal manufactures. The upside is genuine. The catch is that this depth is unevenly distributed, so the value is captured only by buyers who can identify the specific plants that match their spec.
Demand is regional first: Chile and the US lead Peru's metal-mechanic buyers
Chile up 30.6% and the US up 15.9% year on year
Eight of the ten top destinations are Latin American
Source: Peru Sourcing Partners analysis
So what: buy the supplier, not the country
Because value and capability cluster in a small number of firms, the sourcing decision is really a shortlisting decision. A vetted shortlist screens for the things a product code hides: installed capacity and current utilisation, materials and weld certification, export track record into your destination market, and the financial stability to hold a multi-month order. That is the difference between a supplier who has already cleared US or Chilean buyers and one still selling only domestically.
The fragmentation that makes Peru risky for a cold search is exactly what makes a vetted introduction valuable. With the top ten firms holding about 42% of value and a long, variable tail beneath them, a buyer who knows which three or four plants fit a given structure, tool, or cable specification skips months of trial orders and failed samples. The work is in the filtering, not the directory.
If you are evaluating Peru for metal-mechanic supply, the next step is a shortlist of suppliers verified against your product, volume, and destination requirements, with introductions to the plants that actually qualify. That turns a fragmented, hard-to-read market into a short, confident conversation with the right factories.
Steady, not explosive: total export value edged up in 2024
Up 3.7% year on year
Jan-Nov 2025 already at US$727M, pointing to a faster 2025
Source: Peru Sourcing Partners analysis
Get a vetted shortlist of Peru's metal-mechanic suppliers for your spec
Tell us the product, volume, and destination market. Our research desk verifies capacity, certifications, and export track record on the ground in Peru, then introduces you only to the plants that qualify. You skip the cold search and the failed sample orders.
Request an introductionCommon questions
How large are Peru's metal-mechanic exports and are they growing?
Peru exported roughly US$750.2 million of metal-mechanic products in 2024, up about 3.7% on 2023. Through the first eleven months of 2025 the sector had already shipped US$727 million, suggesting a stronger full-year 2025. It remains a small base next to regional peers, which is precisely why supplier choice matters.
What metal-mechanic products does Peru actually export?
The range covers fabricated steel structures, which make up an estimated 70% of the country's metal-mechanic activity, plus mining drilling equipment, generator sets, hand and machine tools, metal manufactures, and copper and aluminium wire and cable. Capability is deepest where Peru's mining industry has driven engineering standards.
Why use a vetted shortlist instead of contacting suppliers directly?
The market is concentrated and uneven. In 2024 the top ten firms held about 42% of export value, led by Resemin and Modasa, while a long tail of smaller producers varies widely in certification, capacity, and export experience. A vetted shortlist screens suppliers against your product, volume, and destination so you talk only to plants that can actually deliver.
About the data: Figures compiled from Peruvian sector associations and trade press for 2024 and 2025; headline values cross-checked across two sources. Source: Peru Sourcing Partners analysis. Figures reflect Peru export data curated and classified by Peru Sourcing Partners.
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