Industrial Order Intake Falls 11.1 Percent in Manufacturing for January 2026

Industrial Order Intake Falls 11.1 Percent in Manufacturing for January 2026

In January 2026 the real volume of new orders received by the manufacturing sector fell 11.1 % when adjusted for seasonality and the calendar, compared with December 2025. If large orders are excluded, the decline is slightly smaller, at 0.4 % lower than the previous month, according to interim figures released by Statistisches Bundesamt (Destatis) on Monday.

The sharp drop reflects the unusually high levels recorded in December 2025, when orders – largely driven by large contracts – rose to their strongest point since February 2022. Over the three‑month period from November 2025 to January 2026 the total volume was 7.4 % higher than in the preceding three months; removed the large orders the increase was only 1.5 %. Data from the Saarland state, which were not available in time for the national calculation, were therefore estimated. In December 2025 the revised preliminary numbers showed a 6.4 % increase in orders compared with November 2025 (the provisional figure had been 7.8 %).

After the high inflow of large orders in December, January’s order intake in several manufacturing subsectors returned to more normal levels. Notably, new orders for metal production fell 39.4 % versus the preceding month, while December’s figure had registered a 29.7 % rise. The declines in machine building (‑13.5 %) and in metal manufacturing and processing (‑15.1 %) are attributed to the reduced volume of large orders in January. Conversely, positive momentum in the automotive industry (+10.4 %) and in other vehicle manufacturing – covering aircraft, ships, trains and military vehicles (+9.2 %) – helped offset the downturn.

The order intake for fixed‑asset goods dropped 14.1 % in January 2026, intermediate goods fell 7.9 %, but consumer goods grew marginally by 0.1 %. Foreign orders shrank 7.1 % overall: 7.3 % from the Eurozone and 7.1 % from outside the Eurozone, while domestic orders fell 16.2 %.

Turnover in manufacturing, seasonally and calendar‑adjusted, was 1.5 % higher in January 2026 than the previous month, and 1.3 % above the calendar‑adjusted level seen in January 2025. In December 2025, after revision, sales fell 0.4 % from November (the provisional result had been a 1.4 % decline).