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Energy prices drag German consumer sentiment to three-year low, finds survey

By Thomson Reuters Apr 27, 2026 | 1:04 AM

BERLIN, April 27 (Reuters) – German consumer sentiment is expected to worsen heading into May as households’ income expectations have become bleaker in the face of rising inflation, driven higher by the war in ​Iran and its knock-on effects on energy prices, a survey ‌found on Monday.

The consumer sentiment index, published by the Nuremberg Institute for Market Decisions (NIM) and the GfK market research institute, showed sentiment dropping to -33.3 points for May from a slightly downwardly revised -28.1 in April.

For the gauge, newly branded as the “NIM consumer climate index powered ‌by ​GfK”, it is the lowest level since February ⁠2023, said NIM’s head of ⁠consumer climate, Rolf Buerkl.

“Income expectations are collapsing as a result of rising inflation,” added Buerkl, after that corresponding indicator took an 18.1-point nose-dive, landing at -24.4 points.

EU-harmonised German inflation reached 2.8% in March due to surging ​energy prices, and economists foresee further increases the longer the Iran war drags on.

“Against this backdrop, people also consider the current time to be ⁠less favourable for major purchases,” added Buerkl, ⁠with the indicator measuring household’s propensity to buy hitting a ​two-year low.

Consumers were similarly more pessimistic about the prospects for Europe’s largest economy, ​with economic expectations dropping 6.8 points to hit -13.7.

That is roughly ‌the same level as seen in April 2022, at the start of Ukraine war, according to the survey.

MAY 2026 APR 2026 MAY 2025

Consumer climate -33.3 -28.1 -20.8

Consumer climate components APR 2026 MAR 2026 APR 2025

– economic expectations -13.7 -6.9 7.2

– income expectations -24.4 -6.3 4.3

– willingness to buy -14.4 -10.9 -4.9

– willingness to save 16.1 18.5 8.4

• The ⁠survey period was April 2-13, 2026.

• An indicator reading above zero signals year-on-year growth in private consumption. A value below zero indicates a drop compared with the ⁠same period a year ‌earlier.

• According to GfK, a one-point change in the ⁠indicator corresponds to a year-on-year change of 0.1% in ​private ‌consumption.

• The “willingness to buy” indicator represents the balance between ​positive and negative ⁠responses to the question: “Do you think now is a good time to buy major items?”

• The income expectations sub-index reflects expectations about the development of household finances in the coming 12 months.

• The economic expectations index reflects respondents’ assessment of the general economic situation over the next 12 months.

(Reporting by Miranda MurrayEditing ​by Ludwig Burger)