Eurostat survey shows Europeans are happier than five years ago

Finland, Belgium, the Netherlands and Austria are the happiest EU nations

Spain has the highest share of people who claim to be happy all the time

Latvia, Bulgaria and Croatia are at the bottom of the EU’s happiness table

Are you happy? If so, are you happier than you were five years ago?

If you live in Finland, Belgium, the Netherlands or Austria, the answer to these questions is more than likely “yes”, according to a recent survey.



Despite the rise of populism, immigration issues, protests and political discord across large parts of the continent, Europeans are 2% happier now than they were in 2013.

Glass more than half-full Image: Eurostat

A Eurostat survey of 25 EU countries in 2018 found almost half of Europeans aged 16 or over felt happy most of the time, while 14% declared themselves permanently happy.



Respondents were asked to rank how frequently they felt happy in the four weeks preceding the survey, using five categories ranging from “all of the time” to “none of the time”.

Something to smile about Image: Eurostat

Finland, Belgium, the Netherlands and Austria shared first place as the happiest EU nations, each with more than three-quarters of the population expressing happiness either some or all of the time.



Spain was slightly below these leading countries for overall happiness, but 29% of the population claimed to be happy all the time, the highest of any nation in the survey.