The Eurozone has recorded better-than-expected economic growth after expanding by 0.3% in Q4 of 2025. Analysts had predicted the blocβs economy would grow by 0.2%. The blocβs economic driver, centered on consumption and investment, kicked into higher gear towards the end of the year.
The Eurozoneβs seasonally adjusted GDP rose by 0.3% in the fourth quarter of 2025, exceeding analystsβ forecasts. The euro areaβs GDP increased by 0.3% and by 0.4% in the EU, according to data from Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union. The regionβs economic growth is primarily credited to consumption and investment that picked up steam, compensating for low exports and uncertainty from U.S. trade policy.
Eurozone economy grows despite reduced imports and the U.S. trade war
The growth witnessed in Q4 demonstrates the blocβs resilience despite concerns that the economy would succumb to strains from increased competition from Chinese exports, the trade war with the U.S., and military conflict along its eastern border. Spainβs growth stood out after its economy expanded faster than analysts expected, logging 0.8%. Germanyβs economy, which seemingly struggled for years with growth, logged an expansion of 0.3%, beating the 0.2% growth that economists had predicted.
ING economist Carsten Brzeski noted Germanyβs performance and said that its βfourth quarter performance is admittedly modest yet still the best quarterly performance in the last three years.β Italy also performed better than economists had anticipated, expanding by 0.3%, while France logged 0.2% growth despite huddles caused by political instability. Eurostat data show that Ireland is the only country in the euro zone whose economy declined QoQ. The data showed the economy had declined by 0.6% after posting a strong 7.4% in Q1 of 2025.
Eurozone sees a positive outlook in 2026 as UK braces for hardships.
The figures point to a stronger outlook for the Eurozone in 2026. Economic sentiment shows an unexpected rise, driven by gains in both France and Germany and broad-based improvements across all major sectors. Industrial activity is stabilising, while households are beginning to draw down their historically high savings rates. The unemployment rate in the region remains near record lows, and inflation is hovering around 2%, the European Central Bankβs target.
The sentiment is further enhanced by Germanyβs renewed yet slow spending on defence and infrastructure. The investment could begin to lift growth from the second quarter, ending three years of stagnation and providing a boost to the wider eurozone. The boost is particularly significant given the blocβs deep interlinkages, with German industry relying heavily on suppliers across the region. Germany is the eurozoneβs largest economy.
However, export growth is unlikely to rebound quickly. U.S. tariffs, intensifying competition from China, and the weakening of the dollar over the past year suggest a structural shift in global trade patterns. The sentiment relies more on domestic demand to sustain growth, placing the burden on the domestic economy to find new sources of growth.
But economists say consumption and intra-EU trade are seen as solid foundations. Most projections see growth in the 1.2%-1.5% range for years, or around the blocβs potential. This environment gives the ECB a notably comfortable position since inflation is under control, interest rates are neutral, and growth is stable. As a result, investors are pricing in steady interest rates throughout the year that can only be disrupted by major shocks.
On the other hand, the UK economy is showing signs of hardship amid slow growth. Cryptopolitan previously reported that the slow growth came just after Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachael Reeves announced the budget, which diminished hopes for improvement this year amid a weakening labor market. Analysts have noted that stagnant economic growth in the country could be improved if the labor market strengthens and cautious consumers begin to ease their spending restraints.
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