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Britons hold their nerve but turn warier about big spending plans, GfK says

By Thomson Reuters May 21, 2026 | 6:05 PM

LONDON, May 22 (Reuters) – British consumers have turned a little less downbeat this month but are the least willing to make big purchases ​in almost a year and a half, ‌underscoring the fragile mood among households, according to a survey published on Friday.

GfK’s consumer confidence index, the longest-running survey of its kind in Britain, edged up to -23 from -25 which ‌was ​its lowest since October 2023 ⁠and was seen as ⁠a reflection of worries about the Iran war.

A Reuters poll of economists had pointed to a reading of -28.

The GfK data typically shows a rise in ​the month of May.

Neil Bellamy, consumer insights director at GfK, said the latest findings were ⁠unlikely to prove a turning ⁠point.

“Inflation may have fallen in April, but ​with price pressures expected to rise again and continued ​uncertainty around interest rates, it’s unlikely May marks ‌the beginning of a sustained improvement,” Bellamy said.

GfK’s gauge of major purchase intentions dropped two points to -20, its lowest since January 2025, with people on ⁠lower incomes particularly reticent to splash out.

A measure of savings fell by a hefty 10 points which suggested consumers ⁠were digging ‌in to their savings accounts to pay ⁠for day-to-day expenses, GfK said.

On Thursday ​finance ‌minister Rachel Reeves announced further measures to ​offset the ⁠energy price shock triggered by the Iran war and a closely watched survey of businesses suggested worries about a possible change in prime minister were also weighing on the economy.

(Writing by William Schomberg, editing ​by Andy Bruce)