The Office for National Statistics reveals fourth-quarter growth missed expectations, raising concerns about economic momentum entering 2026.
Britain’s economic growth remained stalled in the final three months of 2025, according to new figures from the Office for National Statistics. Gross Domestic Product increased by just 0.1% in the October-to-December quarter, matching the third quarter’s anaemic pace but falling short of forecasts from economists, the Bank of England, and independent analysts who had predicted 0.2% growth.
The disappointing performance has prompted fresh questions about the health of Britain’s economy as the government seeks to rebuild public finances following Rachel Reeves’ autumn budget. Whilst the full-year 2025 figure of 1.3% growth positioned Britain ahead of major European counterparts—Germany managed 0.4%, France 0.9%, and Italy 0.7%—the slowdown as the year progressed suggests weakening momentum entering 2026.
Services sector flatlining amid mixed economic signalsThe services sector, which typically drives two-thirds of economic activity in Britain, completely stalled in Q4, contributing 0% growth. This follows a modest 0.2% increase in the previous quarter. The Office for National Statistics noted that eight of the fourteen services subsectors showed growth, but this was offset by contractions in others. Education and financial services performed well, yet the broader sector’s failure to advance signals softening consumer and business demand.
Construction proved to be the economy’s biggest problem area, shrinking by 2.1%—the worst performance in more than four years. This contraction raises concerns about the health of the housing market and commercial building sector, both crucial for employment and investment. The weakness appears particularly significant given government pledges to accelerate housebuilding and infrastructure investment.
Manufacturing provided the strongest bright spot, growing by 0.9% in Q4 after the sector had contracted in the previous quarter. Mining and quarrying also expanded by 1.4%, helping production output grow overall by 1.2%. The Office for National Statistics attributed some of this rebound to recovery following a major cyber attack on Jaguar Land Rover in August 2024, which had disrupted output.
Per capita decline deepens household concernsA particularly troubling figure emerged in the data on growth per head. Economic growth per person contracted by 0.1% for a second consecutive quarter, meaning living standards measured by GDP per capita are falling despite headline growth remaining positive. Whilst the annual per capita figure for 2025 showed a 1.0% increase, the recent quarterly pattern reflects how economic growth is not translating into improved prosperity for individual households—a critical political challenge for the government.
Monthly data hints at December weaknessIn December alone, the economy grew by 0.1%, matching Reuters polling but representing a deceleration from the 0.2% recorded in November. That monthly figure was subsequently revised downwards from an initial estimate of 0.3%, indicating the final quarter underperformed earlier expectations. The cumulative effect has left the absolute size of the UK economy in January 2026 back at the levels recorded in June 2025, representing nine months of minimal expansion.
What forecasters expect in 2026The disappointment in Q4 has prompted economic forecasters to revise their outlook downwards. Capital Economics has adjusted its forecast for 2026 growth to 1.0%, down from the 1.3% recorded in 2025, suggesting the slower pace will persist. The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, which narrowly voted 5-4 to hold interest rates at 3.75% in March, acknowledged that inflation persistence risks have diminished and inflation is expected to slow towards the 2% target by April. However, the committee appears cautious about cutting rates whilst growth remains uncertain.
Analysts have characterised the economic performance as particularly weak given that it unfolded during a period when consumer spending showed “promising signs” according to investment strategists. The resilience of household spending was offset by falls in investment and construction activity, suggesting businesses remain cautious about future prospects.
Implications for confidence and fiscal plansThe sluggish growth poses a challenge for government fiscal projections. Prime Minister Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves have positioned economic growth as critical to their strategy of improving the public finances and delivering improved public services. Sustained growth below forecasts would undermine tax revenues and potentially require difficult decisions on spending plans or borrowing.
The Office for National Statistics indicated that nominal GDP—the value of goods and services at current prices—increased by 1.0% in Q3 2025, and is 4.8% higher compared with the same quarter a year ago, suggesting inflation continues to inflate monetary values even as real output grows modestly.
Source: @ONS
Key Takeaways
- UK GDP grew just 0.1% in the final quarter of 2025, matching the third quarter and disappointing expectations of 0.2%
- The services sector flatlined at 0% growth whilst construction contracted by 2.1%, the worst performance in over four years
- Economic growth per head fell 0.1% for a second consecutive quarter, indicating living standards are declining despite headline growth remaining positive
What This Means for Kent Residents
For households across Kent, these figures translate into limited wage growth, continued cost-of-living pressures, and reduced business confidence that typically precedes employment uncertainty. The contraction in construction is particularly relevant for Kent, where housebuilding has been central to local development plans and economic strategy. Weak growth also threatens local authority revenues and could impact public services. The continued flatness of the services sector is concerning for the many Kent workers in retail, hospitality, and financial services who may see limited opportunities for advancement or pay rises. Businesses across the county may respond to this sluggish growth by deferring investment and recruitment decisions, adding to economic caution heading into spring 2026.


