The HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI inched higher to 51 in August of 2025 from 50.9 in the previous month, revised marginally lower from the flash estimate of 51.1 but remaining ahead of the initial market expectations of 50.7. The result reflected a third consecutive acceleration for the Eurozone's sharpest expansion in private sector activity in one year, with a fresh rebound among manufacturers (50.7 vs 49.8 in July) and slower growth for service providers (50.5). New orders at the aggregate level increased for the first time in 15 months, despite a reduction in new export orders. The signal of new capacity demand drove firms to increase their headcounts the most in 14 months. Meanwhile, input cost inflation accelerated to a five-month high, subsequently lifting output charges. Despite the stronger headline reading, business confidence was broadly unchanged in the period amid concerns of tariffs from the US and economic headwinds in the Euro Area. source: S&P Global

Composite PMI In the Euro Area increased to 51 points in August from 50.90 points in July of 2025. Composite PMI in Euro Area averaged 51.52 points from 2012 until 2025, reaching an all time high of 60.20 points in July of 2021 and a record low of 13.60 points in April of 2020. This page provides the latest reported value for - Euro Area Composite PMI - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.

Composite PMI In the Euro Area increased to 51 points in August from 50.90 points in July of 2025. Composite PMI in Euro Area is expected to be 51.40 points by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. In the long-term, the Euro Area Composite PMI is projected to trend around 51.00 points in 2026 and 52.20 points in 2027, according to our econometric models.


Components Last Previous Unit Reference
HCOB Manufacturing PMI 50.70 49.80 points Aug 2025
HCOB Services PMI 50.50 51.00 points Aug 2025

Related Last Previous Unit Reference
Bankruptcies QoQ 1.70 -1.50 percent Jun 2025
Business Confidence -0.72 -0.71 points Aug 2025
Capacity Utilization 77.80 77.80 percent Sep 2025
Car Registrations 757564.00 721275.00 Units Jul 2025
Changes in Inventories 31.09 14.32 EUR Billion Jun 2025
Industrial Production YoY 0.20 3.10 percent Jun 2025
Industrial Production MoM -1.30 1.10 percent Jun 2025
Industrial Sentiment -10.30 -10.50 points Aug 2025
Manufacturing Production -0.20 3.20 percent Jun 2025
Mining Production 2.40 1.20 percent Jun 2025
Services Sentiment 3.60 4.10 points Aug 2025
ZEW Economic Sentiment Index 25.10 36.10 points Aug 2025

Euro Area Composite PMI
The HCOB Eurozone Composite Output Index, which is a weighted average of the Manufacturing Output Index and the Services Business Activity Index, is compiled by S&P Global from responses to questionnaires sent to survey panels of manufacturers in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Austria, Ireland and Greece, and of service providers in Germany, France, Italy, Spain and Ireland, totaling around 5,000 private sector companies. The index tracks variables such as sales, new orders, employment, inventories and prices; and varies between 0 and 100, with a reading above 50 indicating an overall increase compared to the previous month, and below 50 an overall decrease. This is only a limited sample of PMI headline data displayed on the Customer’s service, under licence from S&P Global. Full historic PMI headline data and all other PMI sub-index data and histories are available on subscription from S&P Global. Contact economics@spglobal.com for more details.

News Stream
Eurozone Private Sector Activity Grows Most in 1 Year
The HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI inched higher to 51 in August of 2025 from 50.9 in the previous month, revised marginally lower from the flash estimate of 51.1 but remaining ahead of the initial market expectations of 50.7. The result reflected a third consecutive acceleration for the Eurozone's sharpest expansion in private sector activity in one year, with a fresh rebound among manufacturers (50.7 vs 49.8 in July) and slower growth for service providers (50.5). New orders at the aggregate level increased for the first time in 15 months, despite a reduction in new export orders. The signal of new capacity demand drove firms to increase their headcounts the most in 14 months. Meanwhile, input cost inflation accelerated to a five-month high, subsequently lifting output charges. Despite the stronger headline reading, business confidence was broadly unchanged in the period amid concerns of tariffs from the US and economic headwinds in the Euro Area.
2025-09-03
Eurozone PMI Rises to 15-Month High
The HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI rose to 51.1 in August of 2025 from 50.9 in the previous month, beating market expectations of a slowdown to 50.7 to mark the sharpest pace of expansion in the bloc's private sector output since May of the previous year, according to a flash estimate. The growth was supported by a third straight expansion in the services sector (50.7 vs 51) and an unexpected rebound for manufacturers (50.5 vs 49.8), their first in over three years. New orders at the aggregate level increased for the first time in 14 months, despite a reduction in new export orders. The signal of new capacity demand drove firms to increase their headcounts for the sixth straight month. On the price front, input cost inflation was at a five-month high, driving firms to increase their output charges the most in four months. Despite the stronger headline reading, business confidence eased for a second month amid concerns of tariffs from the US and economic headwinds in the Euro Area.
2025-08-21
Eurozone Private Sector Activity Revised Lower
The HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI rose to 50.9 in July of 2025 from 50.6 in the previous month, tying the sharpest expansion in the Euro Area's private economic activity in seven months from March. The result was revised lower from initial estimates of 51, but remained slightly ahead of initial market expectations of a 50.8. The expansion was led by stronger activity for service providers (51.0 vs 50.5 in June) and a near stabilization for factories (49.8 vs 49.5), their least pessimistic result in three years. New orders at the aggregate level were marginally down in the period to nearly end 13 straight months of contraction, although output was higher in both sectors. In turn, the less pessimistic for new business drove firms to increase their staffing levels for the first time in five months. On the price front, input cost inflation eased to a five month low, driving firms to keep output charges unchanged following two months of declines.
2025-08-05