Business

Ranked: America’s Biggest Industries By Economic Output

The U.S. economy generated $31.4 trillion in GDP in 2025, making it the largest economy in the world.

But which industries contribute the most to that output?

This article was written by Bruno Venditti and originally published by Visual Capitalist.

This visualization ranks America’s biggest industries by economic output, showing how each sector contributed to GDP in 2025. The data comes from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Finance, real estate, insurance, rental, and leasing led all industries at $6.8 trillion in output, accounting for more than one-fifth of the entire economy.

Finance and Business Services Lead the Economy

No other industry comes close to the size of finance, real estate, insurance, rental, and leasing.

The sector generated nearly $2.7 trillion more output than the second-ranked professional and business services category, making it the clear leader in America’s economy.

Rank Industry Value Added ($T) Share Category
1 Finance, insurance, real estate, rental, leasing 6.8 21.8% Services
2 Professional and business services 4.1 13.1% Services
3 Manufacturing 3.0 9.4% Goods
4 Educational services, health care, and social assistance 2.8 8.9% Services
5 State and local government 2.4 7.6% Public
6 Wholesale trade 2.0 6.4% Services
7 Retail trade 2.0 6.2% Services
8 Information 1.8 5.6% Services
9 Arts, entertainment, recreation, accommodation, food services 1.4 4.3% Services
10 Construction 1.3 4.3% Goods
11 Federal government 1.1 3.5% Public
12 Transportation and warehousing 1.0 3.3% Services
13 Other services, except government 0.66 2.1% Services
14 Utilities 0.49 1.6% Services
15 Mining 0.37 1.2% Goods
16 Agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting 0.26 0.8% Goods
Total 2025 U.S. GDP 31.4 100.0%

Professional and business services added $4.1 trillion, or 13.1% of GDP. This category includes legal services, consulting, accounting, engineering, and administrative support businesses that help power virtually every other industry.

Together, the top two sectors accounted for nearly 35% of all economic output, underscoring the growing importance of knowledge-based and service-oriented activities in the modern economy. Overall, services-producing industries account for 73% of U.S. GDP.

Manufacturing Remains a Major Contributor

Manufacturing ranked as America’s largest goods-producing industry in 2025, generating $3.0 trillion in output and accounting for 9.4% of GDP. While services dominate the economy overall, manufacturing remains one of the country’s most important sources of economic activity.

Construction also played a significant role, contributing $1.3 trillion, while wholesale and retail trade added a combined $4.0 trillion.

Meanwhile, traditionally resource-focused sectors such as agriculture and mining represented a relatively small share of total output, together accounting for just 2.0% of GDP.

Government and Essential Services Play a Key Role

If combined into a single category, federal, state, and local government activity generated $3.5 trillion in economic output during 2025. That would make government one of the largest contributors to U.S. GDP, accounting for 11.1% of total output.

Healthcare, education, and social assistance services also represented a major economic engine, producing $2.8 trillion in output, while information services, which include software, telecommunications, publishing, and digital platforms, generated $1.8 trillion in GDP.

Share
U Cast Studios

Recent Posts

  • Lifestyle

How Out-Of-Work Fisherman Saved The American Revolution

George Washington knew his forces could not win the American Revolutionary War without some measure… Read More

2 days ago
  • Lifestyle

The Cost Of The Grain That Feeds Half The World Just Posted Biggest Monthly Surge Since 2008

Asian rice prices logged their biggest monthly gain in nearly two decades in May, as… Read More

2 days ago
  • I Read It On The Internet

AI Can Chart A Course To Disaster Faster Than Humans Can Notice

Earlier this year, researchers at King’s College London gave three commercial AI models—GPT-5.2, Claude Sonnet 4,… Read More

3 days ago
  • Lifestyle

How Sleep And Dementia May Be Linked

A new article digs into how sleep, the brain’s process for clearing waste, and dementia… Read More

6 days ago
  • Business

Data Centers Now Consume 6% Of US Electricity—And The Backlash Has Begun

Strong opposition kicks in when data center demand surpasses 5% of a country's power supply.… Read More

1 week ago
  • Business

Oklo COO Says Nuclear Waste Could Power America For 150 Years

Earlier this week, we covered Oklo’s approval by Chris Wright’s DOE to convert plutonium previously set for… Read More

1 week ago

This website uses cookies.