The German finance ministry reported that combined tax collections for federal and state governments rose 3.6% in March compared with the same month a year earlier, reaching a total of 89.3 billion euros.
Officials flagged, however, that the year-on-year comparison is distorted by one-off elements. In particular, effects in import value-added tax (VAT) and non-assessed taxes on earnings weighed on the comparability of receipts. The ministry noted that excluding those specific factors, tax revenue would likely have shown a slight decline rather than the headline increase.
For the first quarter as a whole, tax revenue climbed by 0.9% versus the January to March period in 2025, reaching 224.2 billion euros. The monthly report underscored lingering uncertainty about how rising energy prices will influence future readings. The ministry said that higher energy prices could push up VAT receipts because of increased prices, but that effect may be counterbalanced by lower taxes paid if energy consumption falls.
On outlook, tax experts cited in the report expect total tax revenue to rise to 926.9 billion euros in 2026, an increase of 2.8% from the previous year. Concurrently, the government has halved its growth forecast for 2026 to 0.5% growth and raised its inflation projections in response to the conflict in Iran. These adjustments were noted in the ministry's reporting as part of the economic backdrop to revenue forecasts.
Exchange rate information included with the report lists the conversion as $1 = 0.8485 euros.
The ministry's monthly release highlights how headline tax figures can mask underlying weakness when temporary or timing-related items are at play, and it signals the role that commodity price movements - especially in energy - may have on future public finances. Policymakers and markets will likely continue to monitor subsequent monthly readings for clearer direction on the durability of tax growth.