×

German business lobby raises alarm over highest number of bankruptcies in 11 years

By Thomson Reuters Jan 12, 2026 | 8:29 AM

BERLIN, Jan 12 (Reuters) – Germany is experiencing an alarmingly high number of company bankruptcies, a development that shows no sign ‍of abating unless the government immediately provides tangible relief, the German Chamber of Commerce, or DIHK, warned on Monday.

Final results showed that local courts registered a total of 2,108 insolvencies in ‌October alone, an increase of ‌4.8% year-over-year, according to official statistics released on Monday.

“Month after month, we are seeing new records in corporate insolvencies. This is also the case in ​October 2025,” said DIHK chief analyst Volker Treier. “We are experiencing the highest number ‍of insolvency-related business closures ​in 11 years.”

According to preliminary figures, ​insolvencies in December rose by 15.2% compared with ‍the same month the year before.

TURNING THE TIDE

Germany’s economy has remained stuck in a phase of meagre growth, and planned higher government spending will likely provide only limited ‍momentum, according to economic institutes.

“To turn the tide on corporate insolvencies, the structural problems that companies are ‍suffering from ‍must be tackled as a ​matter of urgency,” said Treier.

He ​called on ⁠politicians to immediately introduce tangible ‌relief in terms of taxes, energy prices and bureaucracy.

“Only then will there be any prospect of the wave of insolvencies abating,” he added.

(Reporting by Klaus Lauer, writing by Miranda Murray, editing by ⁠Thomas Seythal)