In 2025, out of 203.1 million households in the EU, only 47.4 million, or 23.4%, included children. Most of these were couples with children (14.7%), other types of households with children (5.6%) and single adults with children (3.0%).
The remaining 76.6% of households without children comprised of single adults (37.5% of all households), couples (24.1%) and other households (15.1%).

Source dataset: lfst_hhnhtych
Between 2016 and 2025, the number of single adult households without children rose by 19.2% (from 63.9 million to 76.1 million) and the number of households composed of couples without children increased by 3.3% (47.3 million to 48.9 million). In contrast, the number of households with couples and children dropped by 6.3% (31.9 million to 29.9 million), and other types of households with children decreased by 3.5% (11.8 million to 11.4 million).
Households with children: from 18% in Finland to 35% in Slovakia
The highest share of households with children was recorded in Slovakia (35.4%), Ireland (30.8%) and Cyprus (28.2%). On the other end were Finland (18.2%), Lithuania (18.4%) and Germany (19.9%).

Source dataset: lfst_hhnhtych
Half of all households with children had 1 child
In 2025, 50.2% of EU households with children had 1 child, 37.6% had 2 children, and 12.2% had 3 children or more. Households with 1 child were particularly common in Portugal (61.8% of all households with children), Bulgaria (60.4%) and Malta (59.5%).
In 14 of the 27 EU countries, most households with children had 2 or more children. This share was the highest in Sweden, with 57.8% of such households, the Netherlands (57.6%) and Ireland (56.7%).
For more information
- Statistics Explained article on household composition statistics
- Thematic section on children and youth
- Database on children and youth
- Thematic section on population and demography
- Database on population and demography
- Thematic section on employment and unemployment (LFS)
- Database on employment and unemployment (LFS)
- Statistics 4 beginners on population
Methodological notes
- A child is defined as a household member younger than 18 years.
- Other types of households with children include all households with more than 2 adults or with 2 adults that are not a couple. These include, for example, multigenerational households or households with adult children.
- Data on household composition derive from the European Union Labour Force Survey (EU-LFS), under Regulation (EU) 2019/1700 on European statistics relating to persons and households, based on data at individual level collected from samples.
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| Zařazeno | st 13.05.2026 11:05:00 |
|---|---|
| Zdroj | Eurostat - news |
| Originál | ec.europa.eu/eurostat/product?code=ddn-20260513-2 |
| lang | en |
| Autor | Eurostat |