Production in the European Union’s construction sector rose by 1.2% in December 2025 compared to November, and by 0.9% month-on-month in the eurozone, according to preliminary Eurostat data. A month earlier, the indicator fell by 1.5% in both regions, highlighting the recovery in activity at the end of the year.
In annual terms, the dynamics remained subdued, with the indicator falling by 0.9% in the eurozone and remaining stable in the EU. At the end of 2025, the total volume of construction in the European Union grew by only 0.5%, indicating a weak recovery in the sector.
By segment, civil engineering showed the best dynamics in the EU (+3.9% month-on-month), while building construction grew by 1.2% and specialized works by 0.9%. In the eurozone, the figures were +2.3%, +0.9%, and +0.6% month-on-month, respectively.
Among countries, the highest monthly growth was recorded in Hungary (+6.6%), Poland (+5.1%), and Slovakia (+4.0%). Austria (-9.2%), Slovenia (-3.2%), and Bulgaria (-2.3%) showed the worst results.
As reported by GMK Center, the average annual production volume in the EU construction sector in 2024 decreased by 1.3% compared to 2023.
According to Eurofer, in 2025, the EU construction sector, one of the main consumers of steel, remained weak. After a 2% decline in 2024, growth was expected to reach +1.1% in 2025, while a slight slowdown to +0.8% was forecast for 2026.
On 24 June, the European Union published a regulation on new safeguard measures concerning steel…
In January–May 2026, Ukraine’s steel companies reduced their exports of flat-rolled steel by 3.1% compared…
Global pig iron production for the period January–May 2026 fell by 2.8% compared with the…
The steel company SSAB Americas, together with its partners The Greenbrier Companies and Alter Trading,…
The new quotas and import duties on steel introduced by the UK government to support…
In May, Ukrainian Railways (UZ) launched its previously announced programme to sell large quantities of…