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Five NATO members seen to spend over 3.5% of GDP on core defence this year, alliance estimates show

By Thomson Reuters Jul 7, 2026 | 11:03 AM

ANKARA, July 7 (Reuters) – Five NATO members are projected to meet the alliance’s goal of spending 3.5% of gross domestic product on core defence already ​in 2026, according to updated NATO data published on ‌Tuesday ahead of a leaders’ summit in Ankara, which also showed some members are still expected to spend only about 2%.

At a summit in The Hague last year, NATO leaders pledged to spend ‌3.5% ​of GDP on core defence items ⁠such as weapons and ⁠troops by 2035 – up from a previous goal of 2%.

They also agreed to invest a further 1.5% of GDP on broader defence-related investments such as boosting cybersecurity.

Alliance members ​have faced pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump to demonstrate they are stepping up on defence spending.

Data released ⁠on Tuesday put Lithuania as the ⁠alliance’s top spender as a percentage of ​economic output, with core defence expenditure estimated at 5.33% of ​GDP this year.

It was followed by Estonia (5.1%), Latvia (4.92%), Poland (4.68%) ‌and Greece (3.65%).

The report showed that last year, three NATO members – Albania (1.48%), Slovenia (1.57%), and the Czech Republic (1.86%) did not meet the previous target of 2%.

It also showed that Albania and ⁠the Czech Republic are expected to spend over 2% this year, with a note included stating that Slovenia’s new government plans ⁠to spend more ‌than 2%.

Some others are estimated to be ⁠at or slightly above 2%, including Belgium (2%), ​Portugal (2.1%), ‌and Italy (2.1%).

The United States is estimated to ​be spending ⁠3.17%, while Germany is at 2.69%, United Kingdon at 2.56% and France at 2.22%, according to the projections.

In total, European NATO members and Canada are projected to spend 2.53% of GDP this year on core defence.

(Reporting by Lili Bayer; editing ​by Bart Meijer)