EU27_2020

European Union (27)

EU-27 covers the 27 member states of the European Union since the United Kingdom’s withdrawal in 2020. Eurostat publishes a combined population of 450.6M, a GDP of €18.8T (2025), a per-capita output of €41.6k, a median age of 44.9 years. Twenty member states share the euro as their currency; the rest retain national currencies.

380 Eurostat indicators across 14 topics, with full year-by-year history.

Population

450.6M

2025

GDP (current prices)

€18.8T

2025

GDP per capita

€41.6k

2025

Median age

44.9yrs

2025

What EU-27 represents

EU-27 is the bloc of 27 member states as constituted since the United Kingdom’s withdrawal on 31 January 2020. The label appears across Eurostat datasets as the canonical area for cross-country aggregation from that date onward; pre-2020 time series often use EU-28 for the same indicator before Brexit, and EU-27 (2007–2013) for the bloc as it stood between the 2007 Bulgarian / Romanian enlargement and the 2013 Croatian accession.

Together the member states account for 450.6M people and a combined GDP of €18.8T at current prices, making the EU-27 the world’s third-largest economy by nominal GDP after the United States and China.

Twenty member states form the euro area and share the European Central Bank as their monetary authority. The other seven — Bulgaria, Czechia, Denmark, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Sweden — retain national currencies; Denmark holds a treaty opt-out, Sweden has declined to enter ERM II, and the remaining five are formally committed to euro adoption once the convergence criteria are met. Twenty-five of the 27 are full Schengen partners; Cyprus and Ireland remain outside the common travel area.

Euro area

20/27

7 states retain national currencies

Schengen area

25/27

Cyprus, Ireland outside

How EU-27 aggregates are computed

For most indicators Eurostat publishes the EU-27 aggregate alongside the national series. The method depends on the indicator: monetary flows (GDP, government expenditure, trade) are summed; rates and ratios (unemployment, fertility, life expectancy) are population- or labour-force-weighted averages of the member-state values; demographic stocks are summed for totals and weighted for averages such as median age.

Where a member state has not yet reported for a reference year, the aggregate is flagged as a Eurostat estimate. Users comparing the EU-27 total against earlier years should check whether the historical series uses EU-28 (pre-Brexit) or EU-27 (2020-) — Eurostat aligns most back-series to the 2020 composition for continuity, but some legacy tables retain the original-composition figure.

Full methodology notes for the indicators on this page are linked from each indicator profile and from our methodology overview.

Indicators by topic

Every Eurostat indicator we hold for European Union (27), grouped by theme. Click through to the indicator profile for the cross-country timeline.

Economy & national accounts

35 indicators

Labour & employment

42 indicators

Demography & population

47 indicators

Income, poverty & living conditions

120 indicators

Migration & asylum

26 indicators

Digital society & ICT

25 indicators

Tourism

19 indicators

More data on European Union (27)

This profile covers Eurostat statistical indicators. The pages below extend the picture into other strands of EU public data — parliamentary representation, public procurement, EU-funded research, cohesion-fund spending, regional statistics.

Sources & methodology

Data on this page comes from Eurostat (380 indicators), fetched from the official dissemination API. Each indicator card links to the cross-country profile with the full year-by-year timeline. See methodology for caveats, revision policy and ranking definitions, or sources for the complete dataset list.

Last refreshed: 2026-05-18 · Source: Eurostat dissemination API