Cyprus delivered the strongest monthly increase in retail trade volume among European Union member states in May 2026, according to the latest figures from Eurostat, highlighting the island’s resilience at a time when consumer spending across much of Europe remained subdued.
Cyprus Outperforms The Bloc
Retail trade volume in Cyprus rose 3.7% between April and May, the strongest monthly increase recorded in the EU. By comparison, seasonally adjusted retail sales edged up just 0.2% across the euro area and 0.5% across the European Union.
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The rebound came after a weaker April, when retail trade volumes declined by 0.3% in the euro area and 0.6% across the EU.
Mixed Trends Across Retail Categories
Performance varied across retail segments. In the euro area, sales of food, drinks and tobacco increased 0.6% month on month, while non-food products excluding automotive fuel edged up 0.1%. Automotive fuel sales in specialised stores, however, declined 0.5%.
A similar pattern emerged across the EU, where food, drinks and tobacco also rose 0.6%, non-food sales increased 0.5%, and automotive fuel sales slipped 0.4%.
Other Member States Posted Gains And Declines
After Cyprus, Luxembourg recorded the second-largest monthly increase at 3.6%, followed by Poland with 2.4%.
At the other end of the ranking, Estonia posted the steepest monthly decline at 2.2%, ahead of Croatia at 2.0%. Belgium and Lithuania each recorded a 0.7% fall.
Annual Growth Also Favors Cyprus
Cyprus also led the bloc on an annual basis. Retail trade volume was 8.4% higher in May than a year earlier, ahead of Bulgaria, where sales increased 7.9%, and Luxembourg, which recorded growth of 7.8%.
Across the euro area, annual retail sales rose 2.4% for food, drinks and tobacco and 2.3% for non-food products, while automotive fuel sales declined 4.6%.
EU-wide figures showed food, drinks and tobacco sales up 1.9% year on year, with non-food products rising 2.8%. Automotive fuel sales, meanwhile, fell 2.9%.
A Useful Signal For Consumer Demand
The latest figures point to a widening divergence in consumer spending across the bloc, with Cyprus standing out as one of the strongest-performing retail markets. At a time when many European economies continue to grapple with weak growth and cautious household spending, the island’s robust retail performance suggests domestic demand has remained resilient.
By contrast, Romania recorded the largest annual decline in retail trade volume, at 4.0%, followed by Estonia at 0.5% and Belgium at 0.4%, underscoring the uneven pace of consumer recovery across the EU.








