×

Exclusive-Germany demands $450 billion cut to ‘unaffordable’ EU budget, document shows

By Thomson Reuters Jun 30, 2026 | 5:49 AM

By Andreas Rinke

BERLIN, June 30 (Reuters) – Germany is demanding a €400 billion ($456 billion) cut to the European Commission’s ​proposed budget of €2 trillion for ‌2028-2034, warning that the current plans are “unaffordable,” according to an internal government document seen by Reuters on Tuesday.

Because the EU budget, ‌called ​Multiannual Financial Framework, ⁠requires unanimity among all ⁠27 member states, Germany’s sharp opposition signals a tough battle ahead, with Berlin warning in the document ​that “as it stands, an agreement is impossible.”

As the EU’s largest net ⁠contributor, Germany is alarmed ⁠by the proposed scale of ​the next seven-year budget, which is ​a significant increase from the €1.3 trillion budget ‌for 2021-2027.

Berlin argues that even with its proposed €400 billion trim, the budget would still be 27% larger ⁠than the current one, pushing Germany’s annual contribution to over €50 billion.

Chancellor Friedrich Merz has urged ⁠member ‌states to seal a deal ⁠this year to ensure planning ​certainty ‌before the budget takes ​effect in ⁠January 2028, especially with major elections looming in France, Poland and Italy in 2027.

($1 = 0.8780 euros)

(Reporting by Andreas Rinke, writing by Maria Martinez, editing by ​Thomas Seythal)