Irish consumer sentiment improves to nine-month high

January 26, 2026 7:10 PM EST

People walk holding shopping bags on a retail street, in Dublin, Ireland September 29, 2025. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne

DUBLIN, Jan 27 (Reuters) - ⁠Irish consumer ⁠sentiment ‍improved to a nine-month high in January but the index remained ‍far below its long-term average, a ​survey showed on Tuesday.

The Credit Union Consumer Sentiment ​Survey climbed to 64.7 in January from 61.2 in December, with the authors noting that the measure tends ​to rise in the first month of the year.

Consumer confidence is above ​April's two-year low of 58.7 at the height of U.S. ‌tariff concerns but much lower than both the reading of 74.9 a ​year ago and the ⁠long-term survey average of 83.5.

There were more negative than positive responses ‌to all five elements of the survey and all five were weaker than a year ‌ago.

"Irish consumers may be detecting at least tentative ‌signs of a slowdown in living cost inflation of late," the survey's authors said in a statement.

But ‍the "still downbeat tone of sentiment suggests consumers view this as some ⁠degree of easing in current pressures rather than signalling any clear gains in household spending power," they added.

(Writing by Conor Humphries; Editing by Catarina Demony)



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