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What Is the EBA EU-Wide Stress Test?

2025 EBA EU-wide stress test visualization showing simulated economic shocks to assess banking resilience

Every two years, the European Banking Authority puts the continent’s largest banks through a rigorous test of resilience. The EU-wide stress test simulates what would happen to bank balance sheets if a severe — but plausible — economic downturn were to occur. For risk officers, compliance teams, and financial institutions, understanding how this exercise works is essential to interpreting its findings and preparing for the supervisory consequences that follow.

This guide explains what the EU-wide stress test is, who runs it, how the methodology works, and what the 2025 exercise revealed about the state of European banking.

64Banks tested in 2025
75%Of EU banking assets covered
3 yrsScenario horizon (2025–2027)
Since 2011EBA-coordinated exercises

What Is the EU-Wide Stress Test?

The EU-wide stress test is a supervisory exercise that assesses how Europe’s banks would cope with a hypothetical economic crisis. It measures the impact of severe macroeconomic and financial shocks on bank solvency — specifically on core capital ratios — over a three-year period.

The EBA runs the exercise every two years in cooperation with the European Central Bank (ECB) and the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB). It is not a pass-or-fail exam. There is no predefined capital threshold that banks must clear. Instead, the results feed directly into each bank’s Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP), where regulators decide on capital requirements and distribution constraints.

The exercise serves four objectives: assessing and comparing the overall resilience of EU banks to severe shocks; determining whether bank capital levels are sufficient to support the economy during periods of stress; fostering market discipline through the transparent publication of granular, bank-level data; and providing a quantitative input to the SREP process conducted by national supervisory authorities.

Key distinction: The stress test does not predict what will happen. It models what could happen under a deliberately severe set of assumptions. The adverse scenario is hypothetical — designed to be challenging enough to expose vulnerabilities, not to represent the most likely economic outcome.

Who Runs the EU-Wide Stress Test?

The exercise involves close coordination among four groups of institutions, each with a distinct role. The EBA acts as the overall coordinator and develops the common methodology. The ESRB and ECB design the adverse macroeconomic scenario. National central banks provide the baseline projections. And the competent authorities — including the ECB’s Single Supervisory Mechanism for euro area banks — are responsible for quality-assuring the banks’ results.

EBA
European Banking Authority
Coordinates the exercise, develops the common methodology and templates, runs quality assurance, and publishes the results including granular bank-level data.
ESRB
European Systemic Risk Board
Designs the adverse macroeconomic scenario in collaboration with the ECB. Identifies the systemic risks that form the narrative basis of the stress scenario.
ECB
European Central Bank
Co-designs the adverse scenario with the ESRB. Provides market risk parameters. Extends the exercise to additional banks under direct SSM supervision (96 in 2025).
CAs
National Competent Authorities
Ensure banks correctly apply the methodology. Validate data quality, review models and assumptions, and use results to set Pillar 2 capital guidance.

How the Stress Test Methodology Works

The EU-wide stress test uses what the EBA calls a “constrained bottom-up” approach. Banks themselves calculate the projected impact of the scenarios on their balance sheets, but they do so within a tightly prescribed set of rules. Supervisors then scrutinise those projections for consistency and plausibility.

The methodology covers five core risk types. Use the tabs below to explore what each involves.

Credit risk
Market risk
Net interest income
Operational risk
Counterparty risk
Credit risk accounts for the largest share of stress test losses. Banks model how loan defaults (probability of default) and loss severity (loss given default) would change under stress, broken down across 16 economic sectors and multiple geographies. In 2025, credit risk generated €394 billion in losses across the sample — equivalent to 437 basis points of CET1 capital.
Market risk measures the impact of stressed asset prices on banks’ trading books and fair-value portfolios. The 2025 scenario includes a 50% decline in EU stock prices, sharp increases in credit default swap spreads, and sovereign yield shocks. Banks must fully revalue their positions against prescribed market risk parameters provided by the ECB.
Net interest income (NII) projections were centralised for the first time in 2025. The EBA provided binding formulas for how asset and liability rates evolve under each scenario. This change improves cross-bank comparability and reduces compliance costs. Despite the adverse environment, NII contributed positively — adding 1,047 basis points of CET1 capital — as banks benefited from higher interest rate margins.
Operational risk includes losses from internal process failures, cyber events, legal actions, and conduct risk. Banks project these losses using internal models and historical data. The 2025 exercise maintained a similar level of operational risk depletion as in previous stress tests. The exercise also considers the rising frequency of cyberattacks amid the scenario’s geopolitical tensions.
Counterparty credit risk captures losses from derivative and securities financing exposures. Banks assess the potential default of trading counterparties under stressed market conditions, including the impact of credit valuation adjustments (CVA). The methodology prescribes specific shocks for different counterparty types and exposure classes.

One critical assumption underpins the entire exercise: the static balance sheet. Banks must assume their balance sheet size and composition remain constant over the three-year horizon. They cannot assume they would issue new capital, de-risk their portfolio, or take other management actions in response to the stress. This deliberate conservatism ensures the stress test captures the full mechanical impact of the shocks.

The Two Scenarios: Baseline vs Adverse

Every stress test applies two scenarios over the same three-year horizon. The baseline reflects the most likely economic path — essentially the consensus forecast at the time the exercise is launched. The adverse scenario models a tail-risk event: severe, plausible, but unlikely.

Baseline

Source: National central banks’ December 2024 projections.

EU GDP growth: +1.4% (2025), +1.6% (2026), +1.5% (2027).

Narrative: Gradual recovery, declining inflation, improving employment. No major shocks materialise.

Purpose: Serves as the reference point against which adverse-scenario deviations are measured.

Adverse

Source: ESRB Task Force on Stress Testing, in collaboration with the ECB.

EU GDP growth: −2.3% (2025), −4.2% (2026), 0.0% (2027). Cumulative: −6.3%.

Narrative: Escalation of geopolitical tensions, trade fragmentation, commodity price surge, financial market corrections, rising unemployment.

Purpose: Tests whether banks can absorb severe losses and still maintain adequate capital.

The 2025 adverse scenario was slightly more severe than the 2023 exercise in GDP terms. It placed greater emphasis on geopolitical risk and trade disruption than previous exercises, reflecting the ESRB General Board’s risk assessment from late 2024. The scenario also included a detailed breakdown of gross value added (GVA) impacts across 16 economic sectors — enabling banks to model sector-specific credit losses more precisely.

The 2025 Exercise: Timeline and Key Milestones

November 2024
EBA publishes the final methodology, draft templates, and milestone dates. Industry dialogue begins.
14 January 2025
ESRB General Board approves the adverse macroeconomic scenario. Scenario sent to the EBA on 15 January.
20 January 2025
EBA formally launches the 2025 EU-wide stress test and publishes the macroeconomic scenarios.
26 February 2025
ESRB publishes a corrigendum correcting GBP swap rate errors in the adverse scenario data.
January – June 2025
Banks submit projections. Competent authorities conduct quality assurance. ECB performs on-site inspections at selected banks for the first time.
1 August 2025
EBA and ECB publish results at 18:00 CEST — including granular bank-level data for all 64 banks. ECB extends results to 96 banks under its direct supervision.
Q4 2025 onwards
Results feed into each bank’s 2025 SREP assessment. Competent authorities set Pillar 2 guidance (P2G) based on capital depletion under stress.

What Happens with the Results?

The stress test does not produce a simple pass or fail verdict. Instead, its outputs serve as a key input to the Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP) — the annual supervisory assessment that determines each bank’s capital requirements.

The results influence capital planning in two ways. First, the projected CET1 capital depletion under the adverse scenario is the starting point for setting Pillar 2 Guidance (P2G) — the additional capital buffer that supervisors expect banks to hold above their binding requirements. Banks with larger capital depletions under stress can generally expect a higher P2G. Second, the qualitative assessment of a bank’s stress-testing processes — including data quality, governance, and model reliability — can influence Pillar 2 Requirements (P2R), which are legally binding.

In 2025, the aggregate results were broadly positive. The 64 tested banks started with a CET1 ratio of 15.76% and, even after absorbing €547 billion in losses over three years, ended the adverse scenario at 12.06% — a depletion of 370 basis points. This was considerably better than the 479 basis-point depletion seen in the 2023 exercise, driven primarily by stronger bank profitability and income generation.

History of the EU-Wide Stress Test

The EBA has been conducting EU-wide stress tests since 2011, though the format has evolved significantly over the years. The exercise was postponed in 2020 due to the pandemic, with banks redirected to focus on operational continuity. Key exercises and their sample sizes are summarised below.

2014123 banksCombined with the ECB’s Comprehensive Assessment for euro area banks ahead of SSM launch
201651 banksFirst exercise without a pass/fail threshold; results used to inform SREP decisions
201848 banksFirst exercise under IFRS 9 accounting standards; covered 70% of EU banking assets
202150 banksPostponed from 2020 due to COVID-19; tested resilience amid post-pandemic uncertainty
202370 banksEnlarged sample; first sectoral GVA breakdown; top-down NFCI projections introduced
202564 banksFirst exercise under CRR3/CRD VI; centralised NII projections; ECB on-site inspections

Why the Stress Test Matters for Financial Institutions

The EU-wide stress test is not just a regulatory compliance exercise. Its outcomes have direct consequences for bank capital planning, dividend distribution, and strategic positioning. Banks that show significant capital depletion under stress may face restrictions on shareholder distributions, higher Pillar 2 capital buffers, or supervisory demands to improve their risk modelling capabilities.

For non-bank financial institutions, asset managers, and corporate treasurers, the published results provide a rare window into how individual banks and national banking systems would perform under severe economic conditions — information that is directly relevant for counterparty risk assessment, credit analysis, and portfolio allocation decisions.

At Generation Impact Global, we build tools that help financial institutions navigate complex regulatory data. Our free interactive tools include an EBA 2025 Stress Test Scenario Explorer that lets you visualise the full macroeconomic scenario data — GDP, unemployment, inflation, and real estate price paths — for any EU country, directly from the official ESRB/ECB source data.

Explore the 2025 Stress Test Scenarios

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the EU-wide stress test a pass-or-fail exercise?

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What was the adverse scenario in the 2025 stress test?

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What changed in the 2025 stress test methodology?

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