Eurozone growth exceeded expectations in 2025, despite Trump
Brussels – The first estimate published on Friday by Eurostat confirms the gradual recovery of the European economy, after a stall at 0.4 % in 2023, followed by a modest rebound to 0.9 % the following year.
With 1.5 %, the 2025 growth rate thus exceeds the forecasts of economists surveyed by Bloomberg, who were expecting 1.4 %, and those of the Commission (1.3 %).
This performance reflects more dynamic economic activity than expected at the end of last year.
Several eurozone countries in fact published on Friday a fourth-quarter evolution of their Gross Domestic Product (GDP) that was higher than expected, notably in Germany and Italy (+0.3 % and +0.7 % respectively), as well as in Spain (+0.8 %). Conversely, France posted a disappointing increase (+0.2 %).
As a result, the GDP of the countries that share the single currency rose by 0.3 % in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared with the previous quarter and increased by 1.3 % compared with a year earlier, the European statistics office specified. (30 January 2026)