Business
Germany Faces Soaring Heating Costs Amid Costly Shift Away from Russian Gas
German households are grappling with a sharp rise in heating costs, with prices soaring by 82 percent since 2021 following the country’s decision to end its dependence on Russian energy supplies after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
According to the German Association of Property Managers, heating a 70-square-meter apartment with gas is expected to cost an average of €1,180 per year in 2025 — up 15 percent from the previous year. The surge highlights the long-term financial impact of Germany’s energy transition, as the country turns to alternative suppliers and more expensive delivery methods.
A study by the energy services company Techem, which analyzed data from 100,000 residential buildings, found that heating costs have reached record highs over the past four years. For many households, the increase has placed a heavy burden on budgets already stretched by inflation and rising housing expenses.
Fernando, a 42-year-old Berlin resident, said his monthly heating bill rose from €140 to €390 — an average annual increase of about 30 percent. Like many tenants in Germany, his heating costs are included in monthly rent payments, which are adjusted at year’s end, often resulting in unexpected additional charges.
According to Eurostat, 13 percent of German households now spend more than 40 percent of their income on housing, five percentage points above the European average and second only to Denmark.
The spike in energy prices stems from Germany’s abrupt shift in gas suppliers after cutting ties with Russia, which previously provided 55 percent of the country’s gas imports via pipelines. These pipelines once ensured a stable and relatively low-cost supply.
“Gas has become more expensive because it used to come mainly through pipelines, and then we had a crisis situation,” explained Andreas Fischer, an energy economist at the Institute for the German Economy (IW).
Germany now relies primarily on Norway, which accounted for 48 percent of its gas imports in 2024, followed by the Netherlands (25 percent) and Belgium (18 percent). However, this transition has proven costly, as much of the gas now arrives in the form of liquefied natural gas (LNG) — a pricier alternative that requires complex shipping and infrastructure.
Despite government initiatives to expand renewable energy, experts remain cautious about near-term relief. Fischer warned that heating prices are unlikely to fall soon, noting that most German households still rely on gas for heating, leaving them vulnerable to global price fluctuations.
As winter approaches, the soaring cost of warmth has become a pressing issue for millions of Germans, underscoring the economic and social challenges of the country’s post-Russian energy era.
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