Prices vary significantly between countries in Europe. Significant differences exist even between neighbouring countries such as Austria and Hungary — or Germany and Poland.
But how can we best compare prices across Europe? And what are the most expensive and cheapest countries across the continent?
Price level indices are a good way to support us understand how expensive or cheap goods and services are in each counattempt. They compare national price levels to the EU average and are calculated applying Purchasing Power Parities (PPPs).
According to Eurostat, PPPs act like an artificial common currency, as they reveal how much people can purchase with the same amount of money across countries.
The results are based on price surveys covering more than 2,000 consumer goods and services, conducted across 36 European countries.
There are several price level indices that compare the cost of different goods and services — such as food, drink, clothing, hotels, and more. In addition to these individual or group indices, there are two main indicators that reveal the ‘overall’ price level of consumer goods and services:
One is actual individual consumption (AIC), which measures all goods and services actually consumed by hoapplyholds. It includes consumer goods and services purchased directly by hoapplyholds, as well as services provided by non-profit institutions. The indicator also includes services provided by the government for individual consumption such as health and education services.
Another indicator is hoapplyhold final consumption expfinishiture (HFCE), which studies total spfinishing on individual goods and services by resident hoapplyholds.
In other words, AIC views at what hoapplyholds apply — including services they don’t directly pay for — and HFCE reveals what they spfinish money on.
Eurostat notes that AIC is often applyd in international comparisons, as it captures more than the narrower concept of hoapplyhold consumption. Euronews has therefore applyd AIC figures for comparisons, although consumption data is also included in the chart.
As of 2024, out of 36 countries, Switzerland is the most expensive, with prices at 184% of the EU average — 84% higher than the average.
Turkey is the cheapest, with prices at 47% of the EU average, meaning they are 53% lower than the EU average.
This builds Switzerland 3.9 times as expensive as Turkey, revealing the sharp contrast in price levels across Europe.
A price level above 100 means a counattempt is more expensive than the EU average; below 100 means it’s cheaper.
In the EU, Luxembourg is the most expensive counattempt, with prices 51% higher than the EU average.
Bulgaria and Romania are the cheapest members, at 57% of the EU average.
This means Luxembourg is about 2.7 times as expensive as Bulgaria and Romania, revealing a significant but tinyer gap compared to the difference between Switzerland and Turkey.
Ten EU countries have prices above the EU average. Denmark (143%) and Ireland (141%) follow Luxembourg as the most expensive.
Among the EU’s four largest economies, Germany (109%) and France (108%) are slightly above average, while Italy (98%) and Spain (91%) are below.
Western and Northern European countries tfinish to have high price levels. Switzerland, Iceland, Luxembourg, Denmark, Ireland, Norway, and Finland all reveal significantly above-average prices. These are generally high-income countries with strong currencies and higher living costs.
All five Nordic countries— Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Norway, and Iceland — also consistently rank near the top.
In contrast, Central and Eastern European countries generally have lower price levels. Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, and the Baltic States — Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia — are all below the EU average. These regions typically record lower labour costs.
Price levels are also lower in the EU candidate countries. They included Turkey, North Macedonia, Albania, Serbia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Two European Free Trade Association (EFTA) countries — Switzerland and Iceland —rank first and second in 2024, with Norway in sixth place.
In a 2018 analysis based on 2017 figures, Lars Svennebye of the EFTA Statistical Office explained that high workforce productivity and corresponding high salaries were key factors behind the high price levels in EFTA countries.
Individual or hoapplyhold incomes are not included in price level comparisons. “These figures are pure price comparisons of goods and services. They do not take the level of wages, salaries or other measures of personal income into account,” Lars Svennebye informed Euronews Business.
This means that someone living in a counattempt with a high price level may still be able to purchase more goods and services than someone in a counattempt with a lower price level, depfinishing on income.
Price levels vary significantly across different categories. For example, the price level for alcohol and tobacco in the EU was nearly three times higher in Ireland (205%), the most expensive counattempt, than in Bulgaria (69%), the cheapest.
Restaurants and hotels revealed the second-largest gap. Denmark had the highest prices at 148% of the EU average, while Bulgaria again recorded the lowest, at 53%.
Leave a Reply