A new survey tracking mood across the European Union has revealed a striking divide: people in eastern member states feel far more upbeat about the world than their neighbors in the west. The gap has become one of the more noticeable trends in the bloc's latest sentiment check, conducted twice a year to take the emotional pulse of Europeans.
2 hours Ago By Kamil Wrona
Poland comes out on top for optimism, with 63 percent of people there saying they feel positive about how the world is heading. Hungary, Lithuania, Slovakia, and Romania follow closely behind, each recording 57 percent. On the flip side, the Netherlands ranks as the most pessimistic country, with 75 percent of its citizens expressing a negative outlook, followed by France at 70 percent, then Germany and Belgium, both sitting at 69 percent. These findings come from the Spring 2026 Eurobarometer survey, which the European Parliament runs regularly to keep tabs on how citizens are feeling.
The EU as a Steady Anchor
Despite the pessimism found in some corners, many Europeans still view the EU as a source of stability amid global turbulence. That said, money worries, especially the rising cost of living, have been building for years now, leaving citizens caught somewhere between hope and uncertainty depending on the day.
Interestingly, the share of people who see the EU as a haven jumped 8 percentage points since the previous survey, taken in October and November 2025. That figure now sits at 75 percent, the second-highest level recorded in the past ten years. Even so, most Europeans remain doubtful about where the world overall is headed, with pessimism climbing 6 percentage points since last time and now outweighing optimism by a wide margin, 58 percent compared to just 38 percent.
Hope, Uncertainty, and Life Satisfaction
When it comes to emotions, uncertainty tops the list across Europe at 44 percent, followed closely by hope at 43 percent, while confidence trails in third place at 33 percent. Hungary stands out as the most hopeful nation, with 57 percent of people there describing themselves as hopeful. Denmark comes next at 55 percent, followed by Finland and Croatia, both tied at 51 percent.
Notably, this survey took place in Hungary not long after a parliamentary election in April brought major political change, with Péter Magyar rising to power and ending Viktor Orbán's 16-year grip on leadership. Compared to the EU average, fewer Hungarians reported feeling uncertain, helpless, or anxious, while confidence, happiness, and determination all scored above average there.
As for overall satisfaction with quality of life, Denmark leads comfortably at 96 percent, followed by Slovenia at 94 percent, then Ireland, Poland, and Sweden, all tied at 93 percent. Greece and Romania sit at the bottom of the list, each at just 63 percent, with Bulgaria close behind at 67 percent.
Copyright @ 2024 IBRA Digital