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Germany: Alcohol prices well below EU average

Richard Connor | Timothy Jones with AFP, dpa, Reuters
January 5, 2026

Alcohol is cheaper in Germany than many other EU countries, with consumption still relatively high. However, there has been a fall in the amount that people, particularly young people and men, are drinking.

https://p.dw.com/p/56NGd
Various bottles of alcohol, from beer to vodka
The experts are sure that no amount of alcohol, of any sort, is good for the bodyImage: Silas Stein/dpa/picture alliance

Alcoholic beverages are cheaper in Germany than many of its European neighbors, figures from the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis) released on Monday for "Dry January" show.

Consumption remains high despite declining, and health experts say the only safe level of alcohol is none, while higher taxes could reduce use.

How expensive is alcohol in Germany?

In October 2025, alcohol prices in Germany were 14% below the average for the EU's 27 member states.

Finland had by far the highest prices from a sample of 10 European countries, with alcoholic drinks costing 110% more than the EU average.

Only in Italy are alcoholic drinks even cheaper across other European countries included. Customers there can buy them at prices 19% below the EU average.

In Finland, by contrast, consumers had to pay more than twice the EU average. Denmark (123% of the average price) and Belgium (113%) followed.

How much are Germans drinking and how does it compare?

The rate of alcohol consumption in Germany remains high, with 11.2 liters (around 3 gallons) of pure alcohol drunk per person aged 15 or more in 2022, according to the World Health Organization.

This is, however, a drop from the 12.1 liters per person consumed 10 years earlier, and put Germany in 9th position in a list of the heaviest drinkers in the EU in 2022, along with France and Portugal.

Heading that list by far was Romania, with a per capita annual consumption of 17.1 liters of pure alcohol.

Latvia followed with 14.7 liters and the Czech Republic with 13.7 liters. In the high-price countries Finland and Denmark, per-capita consumption amounted to 9.5 and 10.0 liters of pure alcohol, respectively. People in the Mediterranean countries were more restrained: Greece (7.0 liters per capita), Malta (6.2 liters), and Cyprus (5.2 liters).

Addiction researchers observe a long-term decline in per-capita consumption in Germany, albeit from a still high level. "Men in particular drink less than they used to — women not necessarily," said expert Carolin Kilian from the Center for Interdisciplinary Addiction Research (ZIS) at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf. Alcohol consumption is also declining among very young people aged between 12 and 25.

But while Germany may be one of the cheapest places in the EU to buy alcoholic drinks, that is not the case for soft drinks, which cost 2% above the EU average.

This is still quite low compared with Latvia, which has a high sugar tax and where nonalcoholic drinks are a whole 46% over the EU average.

How important is alcohol in the lives of Germans?

Edited by: Roshni Majumdar

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter, Berlin Briefing.

Richard Connor Reporting on stories from around the world, with a particular focus on Europe — especially Germany.
Timothy Jones Writer, translator and editor with DW's online news team.