Reserves, No Reserves, or Some Reserves — What’s the Story?

Here’s the most recent accurate picture we can draw of Sri Lanka’s foreign reserve position based on the latest local official data and independent reporting:

Current Reserve Level (Late 2025)

The most recent data show that Sri Lanka’s gross official foreign exchange reserves were around USD 6.08 billion by the end of November 2025. This figure reflects continued monetary pressures, modest acquisitions by the Central Bank, and external debt obligations.

Earlier in the year — around March 2025 — reserves briefly peaked at roughly USD 6.51 billion before declining later in the year with ongoing imports, debt payments, and exchange rate pressures.
Recent Trend: Slight Decline in 2025

• In August 2025, reserves were modestly reported at ~USD 6.16 billion.
• By October 2025, the reserve figure was reported at around USD 6.22 billion.
• The latest official data point — end of November 2025 — USD 6.08 billion — suggests a slight downward drift as the Central Bank balances exchange rate support and external payments.

So the most recent published figure is ~USD 6.08 billion.
IMF and Reserve Usability
It’s worth noting — and this has been pointed out by independent analysts — that headline reserve figures often include swap arrangements (e.g., with the People’s Bank of China) that international standards (IMF) do not treat as readily usable reserve assets. One fact-check estimate suggested that if such swaps were excluded, usable reserves would be smaller by roughly USD 1.4 billion versus headline numbers.

Additionally, the IMF’s Net International Reserves (NIR) — a narrower measure of what is truly available after liabilities — was projected to rise much more modestly into 2025/26 in IMF reporting, significantly below earlier forecasts.
Reserve figures are not static “cash in a vault.” They include:
• Foreign currency assets
• IMF special drawing rights
• Swap lines and contingent arrangements
Some of these are not immediately usable in a crisis.
Also, the Central Bank has been a net purchaser of foreign exchange from domestic markets — helping blunt rupee volatility but also shaping the reserve profile.

Summary Period

Approx. Gross Foreign Reserves

Mar 2025 ~USD 6.51 bn
Aug 2025 ~USD 6.16 bn
Oct 2025 ~USD 6.22 bn
Nov 2025 ~USD 6.08 bn

Dec 2025 –Jan 2026
Latest reporting suggests the same range with pressure to maintain stability Bottom line: The most accurate published figure as of early January 2026 is about USD 6.08 billion in gross official reserves — though usable reserves (net of swaps and contingent liabilities) are materially lower.