π±π» Latvia: income growth amid structural constraints
Source: Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia (EU-SILC survey, 2024)
Income level and growth
Average disposable household income reached β¬950 per person per month in 2024, up 12.0% year-on-year (2023: +14.6%).
Growth continues, but at a slowing pace.
Education gap
Households where the main earner has higher education averaged β¬1,213 per person per month.
Where the main earnerβs education does not exceed primary level, income averaged β¬654.
Education remains the strongest income divider.
Household structure and children
Single working-age adults (under 65) have the highest income: β¬1,256 per person.
Households with children earn significantly less per household member:
Single-parent households: β¬701
Families with three or more children: β¬761
This matters structurally, as Latvia has one of the highest shares of single-parent households in the EU, predominantly with one child.
Seniors
Households where the main income recipient is 65+ average β¬799 per person, well below the national average.
Pension-based households rely primarily on social transfers, not labour income.
With population ageing, this group is growing in size, reinforcing pressure on domestic demand.
Income distribution
Lowest income quintile: β¬317 per person per month
Highest income quintile: β¬2,084
Income gap widened: the top quintile earns 6.7Γ more than the bottom quintile (S80/S20).
Gini coefficient: 35.6 (up from 34.2 in 2023), among the highest in the EU.
Income structure
Labour income: 68.2% of total disposable income on average.
Social transfers: 22.2%.
In the lowest quintile, social transfers account for 51.8% of income; labour income only 40.3%.
Minimum income threshold
Share of population below the minimum income level increased to 8.3% in 2024, the highest since 2018.
Signal
Latviaβs income growth is real but uneven. Education, household composition, and age increasingly determine economic outcomes. A rising share of seniors, a large single-parent segment, and widening inequality act as structural constraints on domestic consumption, even as average incomes continue to rise. BSM Β© 2026
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