In Germany, the likelihood of being passed counterfeit money has decreased after the number of counterfeit notes fell again last year for the first time in three years, following a period of sometimes sharp increases.
Police, retailers and banks seized 67,963 counterfeit euro banknotes in 2025, which is 6.1% less than in 2024, the Bundesbank reported on Friday.
Statistically, this equates to eight counterfeit notes per 10,000 inhabitants. Across European payment transactions, a total of 444,000 fake euro notes appeared last year, 110,000 fewer than in 2024.
In relation to Germany, however, it was still the second-largest amount of counterfeit money seized since 2017.
Consumers should therefore remain vigilant, especially as counterfeiters focus on particularly common notes like the €20 and €50. These notes frequently change hands, and when someone receives a €20 note as change, they often do not check its authenticity very closely.
Less damage from counterfeit euro notes
Overall, counterfeiters in Germany caused around €4 million ($4.71 million) in damage with counterfeit euro notes last year, compared to €4.5 million in 2024.
"The significantly lower damage sum is due to a noticeable decline in the counterfeiting of €100 and €200 banknotes," explained Bundesbank board member Burkhard Balz.
Some businesses do not accept €100 or €200 notes at all, or scrutinize these denominations particularly closely.
On a European level, the damage in 2025 was €22.2 million, below the previous year's figure of €26.2 million.
2026-02-27T11:54:20Z