Gestamp reports €11.3 billion revenue in 2025, down 5.4% amid challenging market
€11.3 billion
11.7%
€1.8 billion
What Happened
Gestamp reported revenues of €11.3 billion in 2025, down 5.4% from 2024, due to volatile light vehicle production and adverse foreign exchange rates. To adapt to a slowdown in EV adoption, the company entered into compensation agreements with certain customers, which negatively impacted EBIT by €52 million.
11.7%percent
Up from 11% in 2024, driven by cost-control and efficiency measures.
“The environment in which we operated in 2025 was once again marked by weaker vehicle production momentum in key global markets, driven, among other factors, by the slower penetration of electric vehicles, which, together with regulatory uncertainty, has impacted the company’s activity. Nevertheless, we have continued to protect Gestamp’s competitiveness through efficiency and cost-control measures”
€1.8 billioneuros
Reduced by €276 million during the year, the lowest since IPO in 2017, with leverage at 1.4x EBITDA.
Why this matters
The results show how automotive suppliers are coping with market volatility and the uncertain transition to electric vehicles, while still improving profitability and reducing debt.
Terms in This Story
- EBITDA
- Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization; a measure of operating profitability.
- leverage
- The ratio of debt to earnings, indicating how much debt a company uses to finance its operations.
- free cash flow
- Cash generated by operations after capital expenditures, available for debt repayment or dividends.
- order backlog
- Total value of confirmed orders yet to be fulfilled, representing future revenue.
Related coverage
- Gestamp appoints Ana Fuentes as new CFO
- Gestamp Q1 revenue falls 5% to €2.8B but net income surges 81%; reaffirms 2026 targets
- Gestamp and Iberdrola sign 10-year PPA for 660,000 MWh of clean energy in Europe
- Mercedes-Benz and TYTAN Technologies Sign MoU for Drone Defense Vehicles
- Hyundai Motor Group Says Real-World AI Integration Attracts Silicon Valley Engineers