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Hungary aims to meet euro entry conditions by around 2030, PM Magyar says

By Thomson Reuters Jun 26, 2026 | 7:17 AM

BUDAPEST, June 26 (Reuters) – Hungary, which currently meets none of the criteria to adopt the euro, could meet these conditions by around 2030, Prime ​Minister Peter Magyar said on Friday, adding that ‌cutting the country’s level of public debt would be the toughest task.

Former right-wing leader Viktor Orban’s pre-election spending measures pushed the budget deficit well above initial plans and pushed Hungary’s credit rating ‌to ​the brink of a cut ⁠below investment-grade level, although ⁠rating agencies said its euro entry efforts would be credit positive.

Magyar ended Orban’s 16-year rule in April with a landslide election victory.

• Magyar welcomed Eurogroup President Kyriakos ​Pierrakakis for talks in Budapest on Friday.

• Pierrakakis declined comment on Hungary’s euro entry timeline but said ⁠the Eurogroup would support its ⁠efforts to join the currency bloc.

• Magyar ​slammed Orban’s government for misleading the public about state finances ​at the briefing on Friday.

• Hungarian Finance Minister ‌Andras Karman told reporters he would inform the government about a review of public finances at a cabinet meeting at the weekend.

• He said this review would ⁠form the basis of an overhauled 2026 budget to be submitted to parliament by the end of August.

• Magyar said earlier ⁠that the ‌deficit this year could come in at ⁠6.8% of economic output, far above initial ​plans ‌for a 5% shortfall and more than ​double the ⁠3% level needed to adopt the common currency.

• Magyar’s pro-European Union pivot and sweeping anti-graft reforms to help secure the release of frozen EU funds have triggered a rally in Hungarian financial markets.

(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs; Editing ​by Gareth Jones)