Trade - Stellaris Wiki (2024)

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Trade - Stellaris Wiki (1)

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This article is for the PC version of Stellaris only.

Trade represents the transfer of goods or resources from one entity to another, usually with the intent of generating a profit from said transaction. There are multiple types of trade possible, each having different mechanics, and all play a large impact on the economy of an empire, multiple empires or even the entire galaxy.

For information about trade deals between empires, see Diplomacy#Trade deals.

Contents

  • 1 Trade value
    • 1.1 Trade collection
    • 1.2 Trade routes
      • 1.2.1 Bypasses
    • 1.3 Piracy
      • 1.3.1 Strategy
  • 2 The market
    • 2.1 Galactic market
      • 2.1.1 Slave market
    • 2.2 Market fee
  • 3 References

Trade value[edit | edit source]

Trade - Stellaris Wiki (2) Trade value represents the civilian and private-sector economy of an empire as well as the total value of all goods being traded. All pops generate a small amount of trade value based on their living standards, with higher living standards generating more trade value per pop; trade value is also produced by a number of different jobs, primarily Trade - Stellaris Wiki (3) clerks and Trade - Stellaris Wiki (4) merchants. The trade value of a planet is further affected by its Trade - Stellaris Wiki (5) stability, Trade - Stellaris Wiki (6) designation, and other factors. Additionally, small amounts of trade value can be found as deposits on celestial bodies.

Each unit of trade value is converted into Trade - Stellaris Wiki (7) energy credits. Depending on the empire's Trade - Stellaris Wiki (8) trade policy, Trade - Stellaris Wiki (9) consumer goods and Trade - Stellaris Wiki (10) unity (or both) may also be produced.

Trade Value is mechanically unique from the Resources it can be converted into because it is not considered a Resource produced by jobs, but a Planet Modifier. Most job modifiers that affect jobs and resource production, such as Planet Habitability, will not affect Trade Value production. Only explicit Trade-related modifiers and Stability will affect Trade Value.

Civilian trade is not available to Trade - Stellaris Wiki (11) Gestalt Consciousness empires. Trade - Stellaris Wiki (12) Corporate empires on the other hand are very efficient at generating and exploiting trade value through branch offices and other methods while Trade - Stellaris Wiki (13) Merchant Guilds and Trade - Stellaris Wiki (14) Corporate Dominion empires are also quite well-geared towards generating trade value, with additional Trade - Stellaris Wiki (15) merchants and access to the Trade - Stellaris Wiki (16) Mercantile diplomatic stance.

Trade - Stellaris Wiki (17) Commercial pacts provide each empire 10% of the other's trade value without reducing their own benefit. This trade value is then converted according to the receiving empire's Trade - Stellaris Wiki (18) trade policy.

The trade value produced on a planet can be further modified by the following:

SourceTrade value
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (19) Thrifty species trait+25% from jobs
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (20) Trading Algorithms species trait+25% from jobs
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (21) Numistic Administration species trait+33% from jobs

+33% from living standards

Trade - Stellaris Wiki (22) Enclave Trader or Trade - Stellaris Wiki (23) Merchant of Numa governor trait+10%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (24) Culture Worker or Trade - Stellaris Wiki (25) Death Chronicler job

with Pacifist Empire ethic

+5% from living standards
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (26) Culture Worker or Trade - Stellaris Wiki (27) Death Chronicler job

with Fanatic Pacifist Empire ethic

+10% from living standards
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (28) Stability over 50+0.6% per point,
up to +30%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (29) Stability under 50−1% per point,
down to −50%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (30) Urban World Designation+20%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (31) Trade Station Designation+20%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (32) Commercial Ring World Designation+20%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (33) Ecumenopolis Designation+20%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (34) Galactic Stock Exchange building+20%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (35) Executive Retreat Corporate holding+5%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (36) Xeno-Outreach Agency Corporate holding+5%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (37) Criminal Jobflat −5
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (38)Trade - Stellaris Wiki (39) Smuggler Activity (Crime Event Planet Modifier)−20%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (40)Trade - Stellaris Wiki (41) Travel Advisory (Crime Event Planet Modifier)−20%
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (42)Trade - Stellaris Wiki (43) Trade Pilfering (Crime Event Planet Modifier)−20%

Trade collection[edit | edit source]

Trade - Stellaris Wiki (44) Trade value is collected by Trade - Stellaris Wiki (45) starbases above outpost level. By default, starbases will only collect trade value from the system in which they are built, but their collection range can be extended by 1 hyperlane jump for each Trade - Stellaris Wiki (46) Trade Hub module present; the Trade - Stellaris Wiki (47) Hyperlane Registrar starbase building also extends the collection range by 1, as does adopting the Trade - Stellaris Wiki (48)Mercantile. A starbase with one or more trade hub modules can also have a Trade - Stellaris Wiki (49) Offworld Trading Company building, which produces Trade - Stellaris Wiki (50) +2 trade value for every trade hub module on the starbase, up to a maximum of Trade - Stellaris Wiki (51) +12 trade value on a starbase with 6 Trade Hubs. If the starbase is disabled or occupied, it will not collect trade value until it is restored. All trade value collected by a starbase must be sent through a trade route to the capital system, where it is converted into useable resources (Trade - Stellaris Wiki (52) energy credits, and possibly Trade - Stellaris Wiki (53) consumer goods or Trade - Stellaris Wiki (54) unity) as determined by the empire's Trade - Stellaris Wiki (55) trade policy.

Trade routes[edit | edit source]

A trade route is a path that connects a starbase collecting trade value to the capital system, either directly or through another starbase, and is required for the trade value to be exploited. Each upgraded starbase has one outgoing trade route, which initially connects directly to the capital, but can be manually re-routed to any other starbase (select the base in trade route mapmode, then right-click on the target base to cancel or switch route). If the trade route of a starbase leads to another starbase, the receiving starbase will send both its own collected trade value and the trade value received from the other starbases further "downstream" towards the capital system. The length of a trade route has no direct effect on its trade value, and overlapping individual trade routes are equivalent to consolidated routes, thus the primary use of manually setting routes is to reduce piracy risk. Once the trade value reaches the empire's capital, the capital system must contain a starbase of higher than outpost level in order for the trade value to be converted into tangible resources.

Trade routes have their own map filter showing routes, protection, and piracy.

Bypasses[edit | edit source]

See also: FTL#Bypasses

Trade value can be collected and routed through wormholes, gateways, and L-gates. Starbases with trade hub modules will collect trade value from the other side of a bypass, treating it as one hyperlane jump, as well as systems neighboring the other end within collection range. Trade routes will also be formed through a bypass if the path is shorter that way, even via the controlled space of another empire if borders are open.

Piracy[edit | edit source]

Trade - Stellaris Wiki (56)

Pirate Galleon

Lucrative trade always risks attracting piracy. Every trade route that goes through a system without an upgraded starbase attracts Trade - Stellaris Wiki (57) piracy in that system, slowly growing for 10 years until it reaches 25% of the trade value going through the system. Piracy is countered in three ways:

  1. All starbases – except outposts – as well as mercenary enclaves eliminate piracy in their systems.
  2. Trade - Stellaris Wiki (58) Piracy suppression:
    Fleets automatically decrease piracy for the systems in which they are located when max piracy is less than piracy suppression. As soon as all fleets leave a system, piracy starts rising again. The total piracy suppression of a fleet equals the sum of piracy suppression of individual ships in the fleet. The amount of piracy suppression per ship depends only on the ship's hull size, with corvettes being the best and titans being the worst.
    Any fleet can be given the patrol command in order to facilitate player's piracy suppression across their trade routes. A fleet under patrol command travels from its starting waypoint, through intermediate ones, reaching an ending waypoint, then re-traces the route back and repeats indefinitely. (Starting and ending waypoints can coincide.) In order to set a patrol waypoint on a system, select one or more fleets, left-click Patrol or press P, and then left-click on a system; press Shift + left-click on another system in order to set additional waypoints; the fleet's current system is always used as waypoint.
    Defense platforms also add piracy suppression, and since they can be built at outposts, this can add a small amount of static suppression in high value systems without a full starbase.
  3. Trade - Stellaris Wiki (59) Trade protection: Starbases give a trade protection value representing secure transports and heavily escorted convoys that cannot be attacked by pirates. A trade protection value ensures that the same amount of trade value cannot be lost to piracy. By default, this trade protection only applies to the system in which the starbase is located, but can be extended by 1 hyperlane per weapon module (max 6), which also extends through bypasses. Trade protection also does not extend outside of the territory of the empire to which the starbase belongs. A starbase's protection coverage can be seen in trade routes mapmode as the highlighted trade protection icons. Trade protection is lost immediately if a weapon module is queued for replacement; however, trade protection gained with new modules and upgrades is only shown upon monthly refresh. Trade protection is generated by the following:
Empirewide sourcesAmount
Base+2
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (60)Mercantile adoption+5
Member of level 3 or higher Trade - Stellaris Wiki (61) Trade League+5
Level 2 or 3 of Trade - Stellaris Wiki (62) Galactic Commerce resolution+10
Level 4 or 5 of Trade - Stellaris Wiki (63) Galactic Commerce resolution+25
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (64) Anti-Piracy Initiative Custodian resolution+5
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (65) Letters of Marque civic+20
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (66) Privateer Acquisition Officer councilor, per level+1
Starbase sourcesAmount
Each starbase level above outpost+8
Each Trade - Stellaris Wiki (67) Gun Battery or Trade - Stellaris Wiki (68) Missile Battery module+5
Each Trade - Stellaris Wiki (69) Hangar Bay module+10

If piracy is left unchecked in a system and rises too high, a pirate fleet may spawn and attack the system, representing a situation where the pirates have become so emboldened that they decide to directly attack a system to pillage it. The pirate fleet will attack stations, destroying them, as well as the starbase itself. If the pirates succeed in disabling the system's starbase, then the system will succumb to the pirate attack and be occupied by a pirate station.

The rewards from destroying a pirate station are randomly selected, with a weighting based on the number of years since game start. The table below shows the chance of each reward based on the current game year; all percentages are rounded to one decimal place and so may not sum to 100%

Reward
Doubled 100 years after game start
Years since game start
<=8080-100101-120121-140141-160161-180181-200201+
SmallTrade - Stellaris Wiki (70) 800Trade - Stellaris Wiki (71) 50047.6%39.8%32.0%24.8%18.3%12.9%08.7%05.7%
MediumTrade - Stellaris Wiki (72) 180Trade - Stellaris Wiki (73) 10033.3%34.8%35.1%33.9%31.3%27.6%23.4%19.0%
LargeTrade - Stellaris Wiki (74) 300Trade - Stellaris Wiki (75) 15014.3%17.9%21.6%25.1%27.8%29.5%29.9%29.1%
HugeTrade - Stellaris Wiki (76) 600Trade - Stellaris Wiki (77) 30004.8%7.5%11.3%16.3%22.6%30.0%38.0%46.3%

Pirate ships scale in class and number with the amount of pirated Trade - Stellaris Wiki (78) trade value, but their ship modules will never advance beyond tier 3. They use galleons instead of battleships.

Trade - Stellaris Wiki (79) Trade value lostCorvettesDestroyersCruisersGalleons
0-1010000
10-4014000
40-508400
50-6012600
60-8012820
80-9014840
90-1000021
100+12001

Strategy[edit | edit source]

As the piracy suppression of individual ships stacks, when max piracy is high along a trade route, it is more effective to consolidate patrolling ships into one big fleet in order for fleet piracy suppression to approach or match max piracy and to reduce current piracy in one system towards a minimal amount at a time – ideally, current piracy in that system will not bounce back too much by the time the patrolling fleet returns; meanwhile, when max piracy is low, vice versa.

Since it is usually more effective have few fleets and each covering a number of systems, high fleet speed facilities suppression of piracy in player's empire, which in turn makes corvettes with their high speed on top of per ship piracy suppression extra effective at suppressing piracy. Ships do not have to be armed to suppress piracy. As building ships increases Power Projection to generate more influence, a counter-piracy fleet can be considered an investment to produce more influence.

If the player has only used the trade hub module in a starbase for trade value collection in early game in order to conserve the starbase's building slots, in the late game, as more building slots become available, it can be more efficient to construct a hyperlane register building and swap a trade hub module for a weapons module in order to extend piracy protection while maintaining collection coverage. This also coincides with higher amounts of trade value that requires piracy protection in late game.

Since trade protection extends over bypasses, the player can prioritize weapon modules in starbases near bypasses in order to overlap trade protection coverage. This synergizes with the need for defense at or near bypasses. Alternatively, building fleet capacity modules can provide capacity for more patrol ships, as well as more power projection influence.

Another approach in the early to mid game is to build chains of starbases in adjacent systems toward more remote parts of your empire (outside the collection range of the capital) with a dedicated trade collecting station at the end of each such chain and then to route the collected trade via these chains from starbase to starbase back to your capital preventing piracy entirely.

Connecting all trade hubs to the capital using gateways will eliminate piracy by removing unprotected systems from the trade routes. Additionally, as trade collection range extends through gateways, it is possible to reduce the total number of collection starbases.

Piracy can be deliberately invoked to harass other empires. If a trade route can be established to go through another empire – such as from a planet you claimed that is surrounded by their systems – piracy is still generated in the other empire's systems. This can cause pirate fleets to spawn in even gestalt empires which do not normally have trade, and can force an enemy to move their fleets to combat the piracy.

The market[edit | edit source]

The market is available from the start to every empire and represents various actors within an empire with whom the empire itself can buy and sell resources. Resources are bought and sold for Trade - Stellaris Wiki (80) energy credits, with their prices dependent on empire economy, supply and demand, and whether the galactic market is founded. The price can go as low as 20% and as high as 500% of the base price, further subject to market fee. Resources can be purchased either in bulk or by setting up a monthly trade and then setting a minimum sale/maximum purchase price. The market base prices are the following:

ResourceTrade - Stellaris Wiki (81) Price
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (82) Minerals1
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (83) Food1
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (84) Consumer goods2
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (85) Alloys4
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (86) Exotic gases10
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (87) Rare crystals10
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (88) Volatile motes10
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (89) Dark matter20
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (90) Living metal20
Trade - Stellaris Wiki (91) Zro20


Internal Market Stable Monthly Trades

The Internal market available at game start resets at a set rate, such that there is a stable trade point where prices reset to the base price by the end of the month. This allows a soft cap of monthly purchases or sales, beyond which every month costs will progressively rise or marginal value per sale decreases.

Maximum 'Automatic Trade' to Keep Internal Market at Base PriceBuySell
Minerals / Food4264
Consumer Goods2132
Alloys1016
Strategic Resources (Crystals / Gas / Motes)46
Living Metal / Zro23


Making Use of Monthly Trade Purchases

Monthly trades allow energy to be converted into other resources in ways that can be more pop-efficient or strategically useful even at early-game 30% Market Fees.*

Minerals: A mineral at 30% market fee costs 1.3 energy. A base 6-energy technician can thus buy 4.6 minerals, more than a base 4-mineral miner. This makes employing technicians preferable to employing miners up to the soft cap. Beyond the soft cap, miners will be needed for further construction and industrial districts.

Food: While food and energy have the production base value of 6, and 6 food at 30% fee costs 7.8 energy, a Generator World designation giving +25% energy production will produce 7.5 energy. In the early game when you lack enough high-quality worlds to have one for every designation, purchasing food can free up that world for another designation use instead, increasing planetary use efficiency.

Energy: Energy is a conversion resource to convert into other resources on the market. Due to paying the market fee both on converting a resource to energy and then from energy to other resources, it is almost* never more efficient to sell resources produced by a pop to buy resources compared to just employing the same pop in an energy job, or re-allocating pops between jobs.

Consumer Goods: Consumer Goods have a base 2 market value even they are converted from 1-value minerals at a base 1-to-1 rate. While it is more pop-efficient to to use a pop to refine minerals into CG than to spend energy buying CG, if you lack the mineral surplus then consumer good purchases can be used to temporarily build stockpiles needed for colony ships or the Distribute Luxury Goods decision

Alloys: Alloys are less pop-efficient than Consumer Good purchases, but purchases can be used to meet early alloy needs to maintain early expansion when you still lack the mineral surpluses to afford industrial districts. Alloy purchases can serve as a way to convert stockpiled resources into an emergency fleet buildup when faced with an early threat, such as a neighboring genocidal empire.

Strategic Resources: Once strategic resources are unlocked to the market, strategic resource edicts are also unlocked. Strategic resource edicts allow significant military benefits, and so monthly purchases during a war can allow sustained use of these powerful boosts.

Zro: Zro is almost never produced or needed at scale before the galactic market. Instead, selling Zro onto the market is a major early game advantage of the Zroni Precursors, which provide Zro deposits on Zroni colonies. Selling 3 Zro for 51 or more energy a month is a major early game economic boost that can fund other purchases

*Angler jobs from the Anglers civic are a significant exception, as their job produces base 8 food and 2 Trade Value. At a 30% market fee, 8 food is sold for 5.6 energy, which with the trade value is more profitable. At 20% Market Fee, such as from the Mercantile tradition for a trade build, the food alone will sell for 6.4 energy, more than a technician of equivalent bonuses.

Galactic market[edit | edit source]

The galactic market is created by via the Trade - Stellaris Wiki (92) Form the Galactic Market galactic focus in the Galactic Community. Once the focus is set the Galactic Market Nomination will begin. For 5 years, eligible empires may boost their chances of being selected as the market nexus by nominating one of their planets and further by boosting their nomination bid.

The host for the galactic market is chosen through two random rolls. The first happens when the Trade - Stellaris Wiki (93) 'Galactic Market Hub Nomination' decision is enacted on a planet (at a cost of Trade - Stellaris Wiki (94) 1000 energy and Trade - Stellaris Wiki (95) 150 influence). This randomly assigns a rating ranging from weak to strong to the planet according to the weightings listed below, under Nomination rating chance. Thus, improving trade value of the planet later on will not retroactively improve the rating of the planet, however the nomination can be revoked (for Trade - Stellaris Wiki (96) 10 influence) then reenacted to reroll the weighting. Additionally, this rating can be improved to the next higher rating by passing the Trade - Stellaris Wiki (97) ‘Boost Nomination Bid’ decision up to two times (costing Trade - Stellaris Wiki (98) 2000 energy and Trade - Stellaris Wiki (99) 300 influence each time). Each empire can only nominate a single planet.

Once 5 years have passed, the second random roll happens, determining the planet to host the galactic market. In this roll, each planet is weighted according to the rating of the owning empire's nominated planet, if any, and the total trade value produced in the system, using this calculation:

  1. Start with the empire's market nomination rating as a number from 1 (None) to 6 (Perfect).
  2. Multiply by the total trade value produced in the same system as the planet. This includes the planet itself, all other colonies in the same system, and any trade value deposits in the same system. It does not include trade gathered from other systems by the starbase.
  3. If the specific planet is not nominated, divide by 10.
  4. Raise to the exponent of 1.5.

For example, a planet with a Strong nomination that produces 90 trade value, with another planet in the system that produces 10 trade value, would have a winning weight of (4 * 100)1.5 = 8000. The other planet in the same system would have a winning weight of (4 * 100 / 10)1.5 = 252.98. A planet in another system with 10 trade value, owned by the same empire, would have a winning weight of (4 * 10 / 10)1.5 = 8.

Winning weight is effectively the chance of each planet succeeding in the bid. Your chance of winning is calculated using Trade - Stellaris Wiki (100)

The lottery weights are:

RatingNomination rating chanceWinning weight multiplierRequirements (any of)
Nonex1No nomination, all eligible empires
Weak
  • 9
  • ×2 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (101) trade value below 50
  • ×0.5 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (102) trade value above 80
  • ×0.5 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (103) trade value above 120
  • ×0.33 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (104) Corporate authority
  • ×1.5 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (105) Gestalt Consciousness
x2Planet nominated
Adequate6x3Planet nominated
Weak rating and boosted once
Strong
  • 1
  • ×0.5 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (106) trade value below 50
  • ×1.5 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (107) trade value above 80
  • ×2 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (108) trade value above 120
  • x9 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (109) Corporate authority
  • x0.75 if Trade - Stellaris Wiki (110) Gestalt Consciousness
  • x200 if planet is Trade - Stellaris Wiki (111) Ecumenopolis
x4Planet nominated
Adequate rating and boosted once
Weak rating and boosted twice
Exceptionalx5Strong rating and boosted once
Adequate rating and boosted twice
Perfectx6Strong rating and boosted twice

Empires may only access and trade on the galactic market if they are a member of the Trade - Stellaris Wiki (112) Galactic Community. The owner of the galactic market system enjoys a reduction in its market fee. Supply and demand on the galactic market affects the prices for every empire, and large shifts in prices will affect the economy of every empire relying on importing or exporting a resource. Trade - Stellaris Wiki (113) Strategic resources will not be available until at least one empire has them in stock.

If the empire hosting the galactic market leaves the galactic community the nomination process will start again to choose a new host. If the hosting empire loses ownership of the system with the galactic market, the market system will be relocated if that system has no owner or is now held by a Trade - Stellaris Wiki (114)Trade - Stellaris Wiki (115)Trade - Stellaris Wiki (116) genocidal empire or another member of the galactic community[1], with the galactic market station relocating to a weighted random galactic community member's capital system.

Slave market[edit | edit source]

Trade - Stellaris Wiki (117) Available only with the MegaCorp DLC enabled.

Access to the slave market is granted once the galactic market is founded. Only empires that also have access to the galactic market will be able to use the slave market. Only pops that are enslaved are able to be sold on the slave market, with a base price of 1000 Trade - Stellaris Wiki (118) Energy Credits, raised or lowered by species traits. Trade - Stellaris Wiki (119) Mechanical pops can be bought and sold on the market if enslaved or non-sentient. Empires will be notified if there are slaves of their primary species put on sale.

Empires that have the slavery policy set to Outlawed will set free any pop bought on the slave market, but the pop price will be doubled. This can be useful for diversifying the empire or expanding colonial holdings by purchasing species with different habitability preferences, provided that a compatible planet or habitat is available for the purchased pop.

Trade - Stellaris Wiki (120) Available only with the Federations DLC enabled.

The slave market can be closed first for organic species and then for all species via Galactic Community resolutions.

Market fee[edit | edit source]

All sales or purchases on the internal and galactic market have a market fee added to them. The market fee starts at 30% and cannot go below 5%. It can be altered by the following:

  • Trade - Stellaris Wiki (121) Trader Proxy Office starbase buildings: −5% each
  • Trade - Stellaris Wiki (122)Insider Trading tradition: −10%
  • Trade - Stellaris Wiki (123)Adaptive Programming tradition: −10%
  • Hosting the Galactic Market: −10%
  • The Economic Sanctions Galactic Community resolution will increase the market fee by +10% per level of the sanctions (max +30%).

References[edit | edit source]

  1. This appears to be a bug, where the trigger should be not a member of the galactic community

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