The European Central Bank (ECB) is expected to raise interest rates this afternoon, marking its first increase since 2023 as policymakers respond to renewed inflationary pressures driven by higher energy costs linked to ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.
Markets widely anticipate that the ECB will lift its main deposit rate from 2% to 2.25%, a move aimed at containing inflation that has begun to drift further away from the bank’s 2% target. The decision comes after a prolonged period of stability in borrowing costs following the earlier energy shock triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Inflation across the euro area, which includes 21 member states, currently stands at around 3.2%, while Ireland has recorded an estimated rate of 3.5% in May. Policymakers have pointed to rising energy prices as a key factor behind the latest uptick, with supply disruptions and geopolitical uncertainty continuing to weigh on global markets.
For borrowers, the expected rate rise will feed through quickly into higher repayments, particularly for Ireland’s approximately 110,000 tracker mortgage holders, whose repayments move directly in line with ECB rate changes. A typical example shows that a 0.25% increase on a €300,000 mortgage over 25 years would add about €37 per month to repayments.
The wider mortgage market is also likely to feel the impact. Fixed-rate loans offered by Irish banks have recently become more competitive compared with variable-rate products, but analysts say a rising rate environment will gradually push new fixed mortgage pricing higher. This will affect both new applicants and existing borrowers reaching the end of fixed-term agreements who must refinance at prevailing rates.
Economists expect the ECB’s decision today may not be the last adjustment this year, with at least one additional increase possible in the coming months if inflation remains elevated. September is being closely watched as a potential follow-up meeting where further tightening could be considered.
While higher interest rates increase borrowing costs for households and businesses, they also tend to improve returns for savers, provided banks pass on the increases to deposit accounts. However, financial institutions do not always fully transmit rate rises to customers, particularly on certain savings products, leading analysts to encourage consumers to compare available offers.
The ECB’s challenge remains balancing inflation control with the risk of slowing economic growth across the euro area, where consumer spending and investment are already showing signs of caution amid persistent cost-of-living pressures.




