Economy — Andorra
GDP, employment, industries, public finance, and currency.
Profile updated 2026-06-02
⚡ Economy at a glance
GDP, employment, industries, public finance, and currency. Key figure for Andorra: Andorra has a developed economy and a free market, with per capita income above the European average and above the level of its neighbors, Spain and France. The country has developed a sophisticated infrastructure including a one-of-a-kind micro-fiber-optic network for the entire country. Tourism, retail sales, and…
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Economic overview
- Economic Overview
Andorra has a developed economy and a free market, with per capita income above the European average and above the level of its neighbors, Spain and France. The country has developed a sophisticated infrastructure including a one-of-a-kind micro-fiber-optic network for the entire country. Tourism, retail sales, and finance comprise more than three-quarters of GDP. Duty-free shopping for some products and the country’s summer and winter resorts attract millions of visitors annually. Andorra uses the euro and is effectively subject to the monetary policy of the European Central Bank. Andorra's comparative advantage as a tax haven eroded when the borders of neighboring France and Spain opened and the government eased bank secrecy laws under pressure from the EU and OECD. Agricultural production is limited - only about 5% of the land is arable - and most food has to be imported, making the economy vulnerable to changes in fuel and food prices. The principal livestock is sheep. Manufacturing output and exports consist mainly of perfumes and cosmetic products, products of the printing industry, electrical machinery and equipment, clothing, tobacco products, and furniture. Andorra is a member of the EU Customs Union and is treated as an EU member for trade in manufactured goods (no tariffs) and as a non-EU member for agricultural products. To provide incentives for growth and diversification in the economy, the Andorran government began sweeping economic reforms in 2006. The Parliament approved three laws to complement the first phase of economic openness: on companies (October 2007), business accounting (December 2007), and foreign investment (April 2008 and June 2012). From 2011 to 2015, the Parliament also approved direct taxes in the form of taxes on corporations, on individual incomes of residents and non-residents, and on capital gains, savings, and economic activities. These regulations aim to establish a transparent, modern, and internationally comparable regulatory framework, in order to attract foreign investment and businesses that offer higher value added.
- Industries
Tourism (particularly skiing), banking, timber, furniture
- GDP - per capita (PPP)
$37,200.00 (USD)
- GDP - real growth rate
-1.6%
GDP & growth
- GDP - Gross Domestic Product (PPP)
$3,327,000,000 (USD)
- GDP Per Capita
$37,200.00 (USD)
- GDP - real growth rate
-1.6%
- GDP - official exchange rate
$4,800,000,000 (USD)
- GDP by Sector- agriculture
14%
- GDP by Sector- Industry
79%
- GDP by Sector- services
6%
Prices & money
- Inflation Rate
1.1%
- Exchange Rate per US Dollar
0.9214
- Currency Name and Code
Euro (EUR)
- Fiscal Year
Calendar Year
Employment & labor
- Labor Force
36,060
- Unemployment Rate
4%
- Major Industries
Tourism (particularly skiing), banking, timber, furniture
- Agriculture Products
Small quantities of rye, wheat, barley, oats, vegetables, tobacco; sheep, cattle
Public finance
- Annual Budget
$1,029,000,000 (USD)
- Public Debt (% of GDP)
41.1%
- Budget Surplus or Deficit - percent of GDP
-0.3%
- Taxes and other revenues - percent of GDP
21.4%
