# EU Wealth Inequality **Last Updated:** 2026-04-23 **Update Method:** Manual — ECB HFCS (triennial), ECB DWA (quarterly), Eurofound reports **Coverage:** Net wealth distribution comparison across Eurozone member states --- ## 🎯 BEST ESTIMATE | Metric | Value | Confidence | Last Updated | |--------|-------|------------|--------------| | **Highest Eurozone wealth Gini** | **72.6 (Germany)** | 90% | 2021 (HFCS Wave 4) | | **Lowest Eurozone wealth Gini** | **50.8 (Slovakia)** | 90% | 2021 (HFCS Wave 4) | | **Euro area Gini trend (DWA)** | **~1.5pp decline since 2015** | 85% | 2024 (ECB DWA) | | **Euro area Top-5% share** | **>43%** | 85% | Q3 2022 (ECB DWA) | | **Germany Top-5% share (DWA)** | **~48–49%** | 85% | Q3 2022 (ECB DWA) | | **Latvia Top-5% share (DWA)** | **~59% (highest)** | 80% | Q3 2022 (ECB DWA) | **One-liner:** Germany's wealth Gini (72.6) is highest in the Eurozone, Slovakia's lowest (50.8). **Caveat:** HFCS Gini values are survey-based and underestimate true inequality; individual country top-1% shares are unavailable from HFCS — only WID provides these. Full country-by-country table requires HFCS Statistical Tables PDF. --- ## Quick Context Wealth inequality varies dramatically across the Eurozone — from a Gini of 50.8 (Slovakia) to 72.6 (Germany). Counter-intuitively, several southern European countries have LOWER wealth inequality than Germany, partly because higher homeownership rates distribute wealth more broadly. The Eurozone-wide trend shows a slight decline in wealth inequality since 2015 (~1.5pp Gini decrease), driven by house price increases that benefit middle-wealth households. --- ## Methodology Summary **Approach:** Cross-country comparison using ECB HFCS Wave 4 (reference year 2021), supplemented by ECB DWA for top-percentile shares and Eurofound analysis for trend data. **Sources:** - ECB HFCS Wave 4 Statistical Tables (July 2023) - ECB Distributional Wealth Accounts (Economic Bulletin 5/2024) - Eurofound "A picture of wealth inequality across EU Member States" (2025) - World Inequality Database (wid.world) for top-1% shares where available **Definition Used:** Net wealth Gini at household level; HFCS methodology with oversampling of wealthy households in most countries. --- ## Detailed Findings ### Wealth Gini by Country (HFCS Wave 4, 2021) | Country | Wealth Gini (2021) | Trend 2010–2021 | |---------|-------------------|-----------------| | **Germany** | **72.6** | Declining (sustained) | | **Spain** | **~71** | Increasing (consistent) | | **Ireland** | **~70** | Declining (sustained) | | **Austria** | **~68** | Declining (sustained) | | **France** | **~67** | No consistent trend | | **Portugal** | **~67** | — | | **Netherlands** | **~65** | Declining (recent, 2017–2021) | | **Finland** | **~63** | Increasing (consistent) | | **Italy** | **~62** | — | | **Belgium** | **~61** | — | | **Luxembourg** | **~60** | Declining (sustained) | | **Greece** | **~59** | — | | **Latvia** | **~58** | Declining (sustained) | | **Slovenia** | **~57** | — | | **Estonia** | **~56** | — | | **Lithuania** | **~55** | — | | **Malta** | **~54** | — | | **Cyprus** | **~53** | — | | **Slovakia** | **50.8** | — | *Sources: Eurofound (2025), HFCS Statistical Tables. Values marked ~ are approximate from Eurofound visualizations; exact values in ECB HFCS Statistical Tables PDF. Germany/Slovakia values are confirmed exact.* **Key pattern:** Germany and Spain have the highest wealth inequality. Countries with high homeownership (Slovakia ~90%, Slovenia ~75%) have lower Gini. Germany's low homeownership (~45%) inflates its Gini substantially. ### Top-10% and Top-5% Wealth Shares (ECB DWA, Q1 2025) **Top-10% net wealth share:** | Country | Top-10% share | |---------|--------------| | Latvia | 64.0% | | Austria | 64.0% | | Germany | 60.5% | | Italy | 60.3% | | France | 54.8% | | Spain | 53.4% | | Euro area aggregate | 57.2% | | Malta | 42.7% (lowest) | **Top-5% net wealth share:** | Country | Top-5% share | |---------|-------------| | Latvia | 54.0% | | Austria | 53.1% | | Lithuania | 51.7% | | Euro area aggregate | 44.2% | | Slovakia | 34.4% | | Greece | 33.0% | | Netherlands | 32.8% | | Malta | 30.8% (lowest) | *Source: ECB Distributional Wealth Accounts, Q1 2025. Top-1% shares not published by ECB; only available via WID.* **Bottom-50% net wealth share:** | Country | Bottom-50% share | |---------|-----------------| | Slovakia | ~17% (highest) | | Euro area aggregate | 5.2% (€3.17T of €61T) | | Germany | ~4% | *Source: Eurofound (2021 HFCS data), ECB DWA.* ### Median and Mean Wealth per Adult — The German Paradox | Country | Median wealth (€, per adult, 2024) | Mean wealth (€, per adult, 2024) | Mean/Median ratio | |---------|-----------------------------------|----------------------------------|-------------------| | Luxembourg | 365,244 | 523,591 | 1.4 | | Belgium | 234,238 | 322,805 | 1.4 | | France | 134,901 | 278,550 | 2.1 | | Netherlands | 121,855 | 342,477 | 2.8 | | Spain | 116,676 | 215,945 | 1.9 | | Italy | 114,988 | 198,321 | 1.7 | | Malta | 111,673 | — | — | | **Germany** | **69,949** | **237,172** | **3.4** | *Source: Euronews/UBS Global Wealth Report 2025 (per adult, 2024 data).* **Household-level (HFCS/Bundesbank):** Germany household median ~€106,000 (2021); west €127,900, east €43,400. PHF 2023 mean = €324,800 (household-level, not per-adult). **The German paradox:** Despite being the largest Eurozone economy, Germany's median wealth per adult (€69,949) is LOWER than Spain, Italy, France, Belgium, and the Netherlands. This is because: 1. Low homeownership rate (~45% vs 70%+ in Southern Europe) 2. High rental market with strong tenant protections (disincentivizing purchase) 3. Wealth is extremely concentrated: the mean is 3.4x the median (vs ~1.4x in Belgium) ### Wealth Composition — Euro Area Aggregate (ECB DWA 2024) | Asset class | Share of total assets (€69T) | |-------------|------------------------------| | Housing assets | 56.7% (€39T) | | Business wealth | 14.8% (€10.3T) | | Bank deposits | 13.5% | | Other financial | ~15% | | **Total liabilities** | **€8T** | | **Net wealth** | **€61T** | Housing = 63% of total net wealth on average (Eurofound 2021). The top 10% hold ~80% of all equities, investment fund shares, and bonds. Germany's low homeownership (~44–47%) is the PRIMARY explanatory factor for its low median wealth. Six member states have homeownership above 80% (Slovakia, Malta, Slovenia, Lithuania, and others). ### Inheritance Patterns Across Countries | Country | Inheritance receipt rate (top quintile) | Average inheritance value | |---------|----------------------------------------|--------------------------| | Cyprus | — | ~€274,000 | | Austria | ~65% | ~€230,000 | | Germany (west) | ~60% | ~€193,000 | *Source: OECD "Inheritance Taxation in OECD Countries" (2021), DIW Economic Bulletin 16/2016, CEPR/VoxEU.* - About one-third of households across Europe report having received an intergenerational wealth transfer - Top 1% of households received ~18% of total transfer amounts in Germany - Transfer wealth accounts for ~one-third of overall wealth inequality in Germany and Italy, vs. ~one-tenth in the US - Receiving an inheritance lifts a household by ~14 net wealth percentiles on average - In France and Germany, ~one-third of total transfer value comes via gifts (inter vivos); rest via inheritance ### Eurozone Trend: Slight Decline in Inequality (2015–2024) The ECB DWA shows the euro area wealth Gini decreased by ~1.5pp since 2015. Primary driver: rising house prices benefiting the middle of the distribution (homeowners in P50–P90). This masks divergent country trends — Finland's Gini is increasing while Germany's is slightly declining. --- ## Source Analysis | Source | Strengths | Weaknesses | Weight | |--------|-----------|------------|--------| | **ECB HFCS Wave 4** | Official; harmonized methodology; 20+ countries | Triennial lag; undersamples top tail; country-level Gini exact values in PDF only | Very High | | **ECB DWA** | National-accounts-adjusted; quarterly; top-5% shares | Model-dependent; shorter time series | High | | **Eurofound (2025)** | Trend analysis 2010–2021; accessible format | Approximate values from visualizations | High | | **WID** | Top-1% shares; national-accounts basis | Country coverage uneven; methodology varies by country | Medium | ### Key Source Conflicts 1. **Germany Gini:** HFCS reports 72.6 (2021), Bundesbank PHF reports 72.8 (2021) and 72.4 (2023). Minor difference due to sample vintage. We use HFCS for cross-country comparison and PHF for Germany-specific analysis. 2. **Cross-country median wealth:** The "German paradox" (low median despite high GDP) is a real finding, not an artifact — confirmed across multiple HFCS waves and by ECB research papers. --- ## Research Metadata | Attribute | Value | |-----------|-------| | **Research Date** | 2026-04-23 | | **Researcher** | Sven / PAI | | **Method** | ECB HFCS Wave 4 (cross-country Gini); ECB DWA (top-percentile shares); Eurofound (trends) | | **Confidence Level** | 85–90% for Gini values; 80% for DWA top shares | | **Known Gaps** | Top-1% shares per country (only WID); exact Gini for mid-range countries (from PDF); non-Eurozone EU members (HFCS covers Eurozone + Hungary, Poland, Croatia) | | **Update Frequency** | HFCS: triennial; DWA: quarterly; next HFCS wave expected ~2024/2025 data | --- ## Connection to DE-Plan - Germany at top of Eurozone Gini ranking → **CHALLENGE 4**: wealth precarity is a structural German problem, not just an EU-wide issue - German paradox (low median wealth despite high GDP) → **CHALLENGE 4**: Germany's economic strength does not translate into broad material security - Homeownership as Gini driver → structural policy lever unique to Germany; not addressed by income redistribution alone --- ## Changelog | Date | Change | Reason | |------|--------|--------| | 2026-04-23 | Initial dataset created | EU-wide wealth comparison missing from Substrate; complements DE-Wealth-Distribution |