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    Home » Germany posts 2.2% inflation in 2025, December rate cools to 1.8%
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    Germany posts 2.2% inflation in 2025, December rate cools to 1.8%

    January 20, 2026
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    EuroWire, BERLIN: Germany’s inflation rate held steady in 2025, with consumer prices rising an average 2.2% over the year, matching the pace recorded in 2024, official data showed. The reading, published by the Federal Statistical Office, kept Europe’s largest economy close to the European Central Bank’s 2% inflation target after a period of higher price pressures earlier in the decade. The annual average reflects a year in which headline inflation eased toward year-end, even as some underlying price components remained firmer than the overall rate.

    Germany posts 2.2% inflation in 2025, December rate cools to 1.8%
    Germany inflation holds at 2.2% in 2025 as December cools and core stays higher.

    The data showed inflation cooling in December, when the year-on-year rate slowed to 1.8%. Measured month on month, consumer prices fell at the end of the year, consistent with weaker short-term price momentum. The year’s average was shaped by diverging trends across categories, with energy acting as a drag on inflation while other areas contributed to continued price increases. The official release is closely watched as a benchmark for wage negotiations, household purchasing power and corporate pricing in Germany’s broad consumer economy.

    Germany’s harmonised inflation rate, calculated on a basis comparable across the European Union, averaged 2.3% in 2025. That measure is monitored by policymakers and investors to assess price dynamics across the euro area. The national index and the EU-harmonised measure moved in a narrow range through much of the year, underscoring a period of relative stability after sharper swings in inflation in prior years. The figures also provided a snapshot of how price pressures evolved across goods and services, which can move differently as demand and costs change.

    Price pressures ease but core remains higher

    While headline inflation remained moderate, inflation excluding food and energy averaged 2.8% in 2025, indicating firmer underlying price growth than the overall index. This “core” measure is used as a gauge of persistent inflation because it strips out categories that can be volatile. A higher core rate alongside softer headline inflation points to a year in which some costs eased quickly, while other prices continued to climb at a faster pace. The overall profile kept Germany’s average inflation rate above the ECB’s target but within a range seen as less disruptive for consumers and businesses.

    Energy prices were a notable factor in shaping the 2025 inflation picture, with declines helping to restrain the headline rate. At the same time, other categories continued to record increases, contributing to the gap between headline and core measures. The federal statistics office data highlighted that price developments were not uniform across the basket of goods and services, reflecting differences in supply conditions and cost structures. Households typically feel these shifts unevenly, depending on how much they spend on heating, fuel, groceries, rent and services.

    What the 2.2% reading means for households and policy

    For consumers, a stable annual inflation rate can provide clearer signals for budgeting and major purchases, particularly when compared with periods of rapid price acceleration. The year-end slowdown to 1.8% suggested that immediate pressure on household costs was lower than the annual average. For policymakers, Germany’s data feeds into assessments of euro zone inflation conditions, given the country’s weight in the bloc’s economy. The combination of a moderate headline rate and a higher core measure underscores the importance of watching services and other less volatile components when evaluating the persistence of price pressures.

    Germany’s inflation trend matters beyond its borders because it influences the euro area’s aggregate data and the broader economic outlook for the region. A 2.2% average in 2025 kept Germany in a zone that is neither associated with deflation risks nor with the kind of rapid price growth that can erode real incomes quickly. The figures also serve as a reference point for businesses setting prices and for labour market participants discussing pay settlements, as both groups look to inflation outcomes when weighing costs and purchasing power.

    The statistics office release is part of a regular flow of economic indicators that investors and governments use to track the health of the German economy. Inflation readings, together with wages, employment and output, help frame decisions across households, companies and public institutions. The 2025 outcome showed a year of contained inflation overall, with a late-year slowdown and continued evidence of firmer underlying price growth when volatile categories are excluded.

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