Bhutanese handicrafts—textiles, bamboo products, incense, and handmade paper—are exported to markets in Japan, Europe, India, and the United States. The EU Bhutan Trade Support Project has helped link 1,400 artisans to eleven export markets, developing 320 new textile designs for international buyers.
Bhutanese handicrafts are among the country's most distinctive export products, embodying centuries of artistic tradition in forms that have found appreciative markets far beyond the Himalayas. Textiles, bamboo and cane goods, incense, handmade paper, wooden crafts, and thangka paintings are exported to buyers in Japan, Europe, India, and the United States, with premium collectors and Buddhist communities representing two of the most significant demand segments. Handicraft exports occupy a niche position in Bhutan's trade portfolio—far smaller in value than hydropower electricity exports or cement—but disproportionately important for rural livelihoods, cultural preservation, and the country's identity as a distinctive tourism destination.
Key Export Products
Textiles are the highest-value handicraft exports, with handwoven fabrics commanding prices that reflect the extraordinary skill and time invested in their production. Bhutanese weaving traditions vary by region: the raw silk brocades of eastern Bhutan, particularly Kishuthara and Lungserma fabrics, are among the most technically demanding textiles produced anywhere in Asia. The EU Bhutan Trade Support Project, implemented with European Union financing, worked with artisans and exporters to develop 320 new textile designs adapted for international markets and succeeded in exporting more than 2,000 units to Europe, Asia, and North America through participating enterprises.
The project also supported the linkage of 1,400 artisans, farmers, and small enterprises in the horticulture and textile handicraft sectors to eleven export markets—a significant structural achievement in a country where producers have historically been disconnected from buyers by geography, language, and a lack of export knowledge. Training covered product packaging, quality grading, customs documentation, and digital marketing—skills that are prerequisites for sustained market access.
Beyond textiles, Bhutanese incense—traditionally composed of juniper, red and white sandalwood, and Himalayan aromatics—finds steady buyers in Buddhist communities in Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and the Tibetan diaspora. Handmade deh-sho paper, made from Daphne bark, is exported as raw sheets and as finished notebooks, lamp shades, and wall hangings. Bamboo products from eastern Bhutan travel to craft shops in Thailand and Singapore, while carved wooden objects and painted thankas reach galleries and collectors in Europe and North America.
Market Development and Trade Policy
Bhutan's National Export Strategy 2022, prepared with UNDP technical assistance, identified handicrafts and agro-processed products as priority sectors for export diversification. The strategy acknowledged that Bhutan's extreme dependence on hydropower revenues creates macroeconomic vulnerability and that expanding non-energy exports is a strategic necessity. Handicrafts offer a particularly appealing path because they do not require large capital investments, they are environmentally low-impact, and they create employment predominantly for women in rural areas who would otherwise have limited access to cash income.
The International Trade Centre (ITC) has been active in supporting Bhutanese producers through its SheTrades and export capacity building programmes, helping female artisans in particular to understand and access global markets. The ITC's work on opening high-end markets for Bhutanese handicrafts has focused on authenticity certification and storytelling—helping buyers understand the cultural significance and production process behind the objects they purchase, which supports premium pricing and resists commoditisation.
Challenges
Export growth faces several structural constraints. Production volumes are inherently limited because the most valuable handicrafts—fine handwoven textiles above all—are time-intensive and cannot be easily scaled without compromising quality. Maintaining consistent quality across dispersed rural producers is challenging, and buyers in institutional markets such as museum shops and high-end retailers require reliability of supply that cottage-scale producers find difficult to guarantee. Logistics from Bhutan—a landlocked country with limited air freight capacity—add cost and complexity to export operations. The government and development partners are working to address these constraints, but the fundamental identity of Bhutanese handicrafts as rare, skilled, and tradition-rooted objects is both their greatest marketing asset and a structural ceiling on export volume.
References
- "Bhutan improves trade competitiveness — EU Bhutan Trade Support Project." European External Action Service.
- "Boosting export knowledge in Bhutan's handicraft textile sector." International Trade Centre.
- "Opening high-end markets for Bhutanese handicrafts." International Trade Centre.
- "National Export Strategy for the Kingdom of Bhutan, 2022." UNDP.
See also
Out-migration and brain drain from Bhutan
Since the early 2020s Bhutan has experienced a large wave of out-migration by young, skilled and educated citizens, principally to Australia on student visas and to Canada. The exodus has drained the civil service, schools and hospitals of qualified staff and prompted Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay to describe it as an existential threat to the country's population, economy and long-term sovereignty.
society·3 min readYouth Emigration from Bhutan
Bhutan has experienced a significant wave of youth emigration since the early 2020s, with over 66,000 citizens — more than 8 per cent of the population — reported to have left the country, primarily for Australia. Driven by limited domestic employment opportunities, low wages, and aspirations for higher education and economic mobility, the emigration wave has raised concerns about brain drain, demographic sustainability, and the future of Bhutan's development model.
society·8 min readThe Bhutan–Australia Migration Wave (2022–2025)
A rapid post-pandemic outflow of Bhutanese citizens to Australia, mainly through the subclass 500 student visa pathway, that the Royal Government has described as an existential challenge. By 2024 the wave had hollowed out classrooms and hospital wards inside Bhutan, prompted King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck's first state visit to Australia, and reshaped a diaspora that already contained a long-resettled Lhotshampa refugee population.
society·15 min readGedu College of Business Studies
Gedu College of Business Studies (GCBS) is a constituent college of the Royal University of Bhutan located at Gedu in Chukha dzongkhag at an altitude of around 2,500 metres. It was established in 2008 in former buildings of the Tala Hydropower Project township and is the principal undergraduate business school in the country.
society·4 min readGelephu Mindfulness City
Gelephu Mindfulness City (GMC) is a planned special administrative region of approximately 2,500 square kilometres in Sarpang Dzongkhag, southern Bhutan. Announced by King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck on 17 December 2023 and established by Royal Charter on 13 February 2024, it is masterplanned by Bjarke Ingels Group and intended as a carbon-negative economic hub governed by a hybrid legal system drawn from Singaporean and Abu Dhabi law.
society·17 min readTourism in Bhutan
Bhutan's tourism sector operates under a unique "high value, low volume" model designed to preserve the country's cultural heritage and natural environment. First opened to international tourists in 1974, Bhutan requires visitors to pay a daily Sustainable Development Fee and has carefully controlled tourist numbers, generating significant revenue while minimising environmental and cultural impact.
society·7 min read
Test Your Knowledge
Think you know about this topic? Try a quick quiz!
Help improve this article
Do you have personal knowledge about this topic? Were you there? Your experience matters. BhutanWiki is built by the community, for the community.
Anonymous contributions welcome. No account required.