Publications

Nonperforming real estate loans remain on the rise in Europe, with extrication looking more difficult than ever
JANUARY 29, 2026

To read this full article you need to be subscribed to Newsline.

Sign in Sign up for a FREE subscription

Nonperforming real estate loans remain on the rise in Europe, with extrication looking more difficult than ever

by Marek Handzel

Nonperforming loans are on the rise. Figures released by the European Banking Authority (EBA) in December 2025 showed the volume of nonperforming loans in the European Union to be €373 billion, amounting to 1.8 percent of all bank loans. This was an increase from the €357 billion registered at the end of 2024. In the United Kingdom, the percentage of bad loans had crept up to more than 1 percent by the end of 2024 and is not expected to drop anytime soon.

While the ratio of nonperforming to overall loans remains low, the share of stage two loans — where a borrower’s credit risk has increased — is now elevated, particularly in commercial real estate and SMEs segments, says the EBA. As a result, the regulator says both need close monitoring. This has created two new questions for 2026. With current interest rates and falling property values, when — and how —  will Europe’s nonperforming real estate market clean itself up? And can institutional investors step in

Forgot your username or password?