Dutch Household Consumption Stalls in January
2026-03-10 06:03
By
Joshua Ferrer
1 min. read
Household consumption in the Netherlands stalled year-on-year in January 2026, following a 0.8% rise in the previous month.
Spending growth for household goods softened to a fifteen-month low (0.1% vs 0.4% in December), mainly due to weaker purchases of durable goods (-1.4% vs 0.4%), as households primarily bought fewer cars, home furnishings, and clothing.
Consumers spent more on food, beverages and tobacco (0.4% vs 2.1%), as well as on other goods such as energy and personal care items (2.1% vs -1.8%).
Meanwhile, households purchased the same amount of services compared to last year (0% vs 1.2%), as they spent more on transport and communication but less on recreation and culture.
Services account for more than half of total household consumption.
Still, the February Consumption Conditions indicator was less unfavorable than in January, reflecting more optimistic employment expectations among industrial firms and stronger year-on-year gains in stock prices.