FRANKFURT, Germany / EuroWire / — Germany’s industrial production fell 0.7% in March 2026 compared with the previous month, according to data released on May 9 by the Federal Statistical Office, underscoring continued weakness in Europe’s largest economy at the end of the first quarter.

The monthly decline was driven primarily by a 4.0% drop in energy production and a 2.7% decrease in machinery and equipment manufacturing. These declines outweighed gains in construction and automotive output, both of which rose 1.9% from February levels.
Industrial production excluding energy and construction decreased 0.9% month on month, reflecting broader softness across manufacturing segments. By main industrial grouping, capital goods production and consumer goods output both declined, while intermediate goods production increased 0.8%.
Energy production decline weighs on output
On a year-on-year basis, Germany’s industrial production was 4.1% lower than in March 2025. Combined output across industry, energy and construction declined 2.8% compared with the same month a year earlier, highlighting ongoing structural and cyclical pressures on the country’s industrial base.
Over the January to March 2026 period, average industrial output fell 1.2% compared with the previous three-month period. The quarterly contraction indicates sustained weakness rather than a single-month fluctuation, reinforcing concerns about industrial momentum entering the second quarter.
Germany manufacturing and export linkages
Germany’s industrial sector remains a central pillar of its export-driven economy, particularly in machinery, automotive manufacturing and energy-intensive industries. Output data are closely monitored by policymakers and financial markets as a leading indicator of broader economic performance.
The March figures add to a series of mixed economic indicators pointing to uneven recovery dynamics across the euro area. Industrial production trends are expected to remain a key benchmark for assessing Germany’s economic trajectory in 2026.
