Romania faces higher farming costs despite falling EU output prices

Business Forum
The gap between European and Romanian agricultural economic pressures widened in Q1 2026. While average European Union agricultural output prices fell by 2.9% year-on-year, Romanian farmers faced a sharp contrast in production costs.

According to data released by Eurostat, the EU experienced a widespread deflationary trend in output, with 19 member states recording decreases, led by Belgium at 12.9%. Conversely, input costs—encompassing goods and services consumed in agriculture such as energy, fertilisers, and feedingstuffs—remained relatively stable across the bloc, dipping by a marginal 0.4%.

Romania, however, emerged as a notable exception to this stability. The country recorded one of the sharpest increases in agricultural input prices within the EU, rising by 5.0% during the quarter. This surge was surpassed only by Lithuania, which saw a 16.8% spike in costs.

On a commodity level across the EU, milk and cereal prices declined by 15.5% and 11.7% respectively. Meanwhile, fertiliser and soil improver prices rose by an average of 6.6%, further exacerbating the financial pressures on regional agricultural operations heading into the remainder of 2026.

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