PUBLISHED April 28, 2026
The End of a Long Era
According to “Das Ende einer Ära: Luxemburger bald nicht mehr Europas reichste Bürger” published by Tageblatt, Luxembourg may soon lose its symbolic position as home to Europe’s richest citizens. For more than three decades, the country stood clearly at the top of European prosperity rankings, but that dominance is now being challenged.
Luxembourg Still Leads – for Now
Based on provisional Eurostat figures cited in the article, Luxembourg still ranked first in 2025 with GDP per capita of €99,300 in purchasing power standards, equal to 239% of the EU average. This remained far above the average EU citizen, but the gap has narrowed compared with previous years.
Ireland Has Almost Caught Up
The biggest challenger is Ireland. Tageblatt reported that Ireland reached €98,800 per capita, or 237% of the EU average, placing it just behind Luxembourg. If recent trends continue, Ireland could overtake Luxembourg during 2026.
The change did not happen suddenly. Luxembourg reached its relative peak in 2014, when its GDP per capita stood at 280% of the EU average. Since then, Ireland has advanced rapidly while Luxembourg’s relative lead has gradually declined.
The change did not happen suddenly. Luxembourg reached its relative peak in 2014, when its GDP per capita stood at 280% of the EU average. Since then, Ireland has advanced rapidly while Luxembourg’s relative lead has gradually declined.
The article points to a particularly strong contrast last year. Luxembourg’s economy grew by only 0.6% in 2025, weaker than many EU countries, while Ireland expanded by 12.3%, the strongest result in the European Union. That divergence significantly accelerated Ireland’s catch-up process.
Tageblatt also notes that GDP per capita has always been an imperfect measure for Luxembourg. A large number of cross-border workers help generate output that is then divided only among residents, making Luxembourg appear wealthier statistically than household reality may suggest. Ireland faces a similar distortion due to multinational companies booking profits there.
Even if Luxembourg loses first place, it would remain one of Europe’s most prosperous countries. Still, the possible change marks an important symbolic moment: a reminder that even the continent’s wealthiest economies must continue adapting, growing, and competing in a changing Europe.
The article points to a particularly strong contrast last year. Luxembourg’s economy grew by only 0.6% in 2025, weaker than many EU countries, while Ireland expanded by 12.3%, the strongest result in the European Union. That divergence significantly accelerated Ireland’s catch-up process.
Tageblatt also notes that GDP per capita has always been an imperfect measure for Luxembourg. A large number of cross-border workers help generate output that is then divided only among residents, making Luxembourg appear wealthier statistically than household reality may suggest. Ireland faces a similar distortion due to multinational companies booking profits there.
Even if Luxembourg loses first place, it would remain one of Europe’s most prosperous countries. Still, the possible change marks an important symbolic moment: a reminder that even the continent’s wealthiest economies must continue adapting, growing, and competing in a changing Europe.