Reed NewsReed News

NATO Achieves 2% Defense Spending Goal for All Members, U.S. Leads Expenditure

PoliticsPolitics
Key Points
  • All 32 NATO members met the 2% GDP defense spending goal set in 2014, with the U.S. contributing 60% of total spending.
  • Poland led with 4.3% GDP spending, while Sweden and others like Germany were in the upper middle tier, and several countries hit exactly 2%.
  • Some countries reduced spending in 2025, but others like Luxembourg saw strong increases, and a new 5% target was set for 2035, with future focus on defense industry capacity.

3% of GDP, followed by Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia. 5% of GDP, placing it in the upper middle tier alongside countries like Finland and Germany, while Spain, Portugal, Albania, Belgium, and Canada all reached exactly 2% of GDP on defense. 3%, both having reached the 2% threshold, and the United States also had lower spending than the previous year.

In contrast, Luxembourg, Belgium, and Slovenia showed the strongest increases in absolute terms, with Luxembourg standing out with an increase of nearly 100%. 5% for broader security investments. The next NATO summit will be held in Ankara in July and is expected to focus on building production capacity in the transatlantic defense industry.

For too long, European allies and Canada relied too much on U.S. military strength. We did not take sufficient responsibility for our own security. But there has been a real shift in mindset.

Mark Rutte, NATO Secretary General

It remains unclear how the new 5% target by 2035 will be funded and enforced across NATO members, and what specific initiatives are planned for the Ankara summit to build defense industry capacity.

I am not sure we would have reached the two percent target by the end of last year without President Trump.

Mark Rutte, NATO Secretary General
Tags
Location
Sourced
Daily Express - WorldEuropaportalen
2 publications
View transparency reportReport inaccuracy