E-Malt. E-Malt.com News article: Germany: May beer sales drop 7.5% from a year earlier

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E-Malt.com News article: Germany: May beer sales drop 7.5% from a year earlier
Brewery news

Beer sales in Germany fell again in May, extending a downturn that is adding pressure across the country’s brewing industry and raising fresh concerns about domestic demand, Vinetur reported on June 29.

Getränke Zeitung, citing current brewery figures, reported that total beer volume in May dropped 7.5% from a year earlier to about 6.96 million hectolitres. Taxable domestic sales, a closely watched measure of consumption in the home market, fell 8.4%, to 5.68 million hectolitres from 6.19 million hectolitres a year earlier.

The decline points to continued weakness in one of Europe’s largest beer markets at a time when brewers are already dealing with higher costs and changing drinking habits. Industry observers cited by the publication linked the drop to several factors, including rising prices, shifts in consumer behavior and the absence of some post-pandemic celebration effects that had previously supported sales.

The figures are especially important for the broader drinks business because they offer a current signal of pressure on on-premise and retail consumption. For breweries, distributors, bars and supermarket chains, weaker beer demand can affect production planning, purchasing decisions and pricing strategies in the coming months, particularly during the summer season, when sales are usually more weather-sensitive.

Smaller and midsize breweries are seen as especially exposed to the decline. With less scale and often narrower margins than larger groups, they can be hit harder when volumes fall for several months in a row. The report said concern is growing in the sector as these producers face softer sales in a market where competition remains intense.

Brewers are responding with efforts to stabilize business through stronger marketing and changes to their product mix. Among the approaches mentioned are alcohol-free beers and regional specialty products, two categories that many producers see as possible ways to reach consumers whose preferences are shifting away from traditional drinking patterns.

Whether summer can bring any relief remains uncertain. Weather has long played an important role in German beer consumption, and warmer periods can still lift short-term demand. But the latest May data suggest that seasonal support alone may not be enough to reverse the broader downward trend now affecting the market.


01 July, 2026

   
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