Electricity prices in Germany 2025
In 2025, the average wholesale day-ahead electricity price in Germany was € 0.0899 /kWh (▲14% vs 2024). Below is the month-by-month breakdown plus a chart of how prices moved through the year.
Monthly breakdown — 2025
| Month | €/MWh | €/kWh | MW |
|---|---|---|---|
| January 2025 | € 114.24 | € 0.1142 | 57,869 |
| February 2025 | € 128.70 | € 0.1287 | 58,770 |
| March 2025 | € 93.66 | € 0.0937 | 56,008 |
| April 2025 | € 76.02 | € 0.0760 | 53,208 |
| May 2025 | € 68.70 | € 0.0687 | 51,292 |
| June 2025 | € 64.30 | € 0.0643 | 50,064 |
| July 2025 | € 88.25 | € 0.0882 | 51,414 |
| August 2025 | € 77.76 | € 0.0778 | 49,530 |
| September 2025 | € 84.03 | € 0.0840 | 52,193 |
| October 2025 | € 86.19 | € 0.0862 | 54,695 |
| November 2025 | € 102.78 | € 0.1028 | 57,567 |
| December 2025 | € 94.60 | € 0.0946 | 57,485 |
Germany's electricity grid combines the most ambitious renewables expansion in the EU with the fastest fossil retirement: by 2025, wind and solar together delivered 56% of public-grid generation. The country shut its last three nuclear reactors in April 2023 and is phasing out coal by 2038 (or earlier under coalition agreements). Bundesnetzagentur, the federal regulator, oversees four TSOs — TenneT, 50Hertz, Amprion and TransnetBW — that together operate the joint DE-LU bidding zone.
The country's north hosts vast offshore wind clusters in the North and Baltic Seas, while the south depends on imports and hydropower from Austria/Switzerland; the proposed bidding-zone split has been politically deferred. Day-ahead prices on EPEX SPOT show extreme intraday volatility — solar overproduction frequently drives midday prices below zero in spring, while late-winter dunkelflauten push them above €500/MWh.