Irish Consumer Mood Improves, Still Subdued
2026-01-09 00:05
By
Chusnul Chotimah
1 min. read
Ireland’s Credit Union Consumer Sentiment Index edged up to 61.2 in December 2025 from 61.0 in November, marking the highest reading since September.
However, the level remains well below both the 73.9 recorded a year ago and the long-term survey average of 83.6, as concerns over living costs continued to dampen confidence despite the economy’s strong growth.
Consumer confidence has barely moved from April’s two-year low of 58.7 amid concerns over new US tariffs.
By contrast, consumer morale in the UK and the euro area has improved after also plunging in April on trade-related concerns.
“The past year has seen a broadly based downgrade of Irish consumers’ thinking in relation to economic conditions and their own financial circumstances,” the survey’s authors wrote.
“Given the importance of the US to the Irish economy, it might be expected that trade concerns would weigh heavily on the thinking of Irish consumers.” Ireland’s economy grew 4.1% yoy in the first nine months of 2025.