
As populations across the continent continue to age, Alzheimer Europe has released a definitive new study warning of a massive spike in neurodegenerative conditions. Titled “The Prevalence of Dementia in Europe 2025,” the report predicts that the number of people living with dementia will climb by 64% over the next quarter-century, reaching nearly 20 million by 2050.
The findings, launched on January 28, 2026, use updated community-based research and the latest United Nations population projections (2024) to provide a roadmap of the continent’s future healthcare needs.
The Numbers: A Growing Demographic Burden
The report distinguishes between the European Union (EU27) and the broader European region (including non-EU nations), showing a sharp upward trajectory in both.
| Region | 2025 Estimate | 2050 Projection | Increase (%) |
| European Union (EU27) | 9.07 Million | 14.34 Million | 58% |
| Total Europe | 12.12 Million | 19.91 Million | 64% |
Key Demographic Insights:
- The Gender Divide: In 2025, women remain disproportionately affected, with roughly 8 million cases compared to 4.1 million among men.
- A Shift in Male Prevalence: Interestingly, the 2025 data shows higher prevalence rates for men over 70, specifically in the 70–74 age bracket, compared to previous 2019 benchmarks.
- Age-Specific Growth: The “90+” age group is expected to see the most dramatic surge, with cases potentially doubling as life expectancy continues to rise.
Policy Crisis: The Call for a “European Action Plan”
The release comes at a critical political juncture. With the EU currently debating its future budget, Alzheimer Europe is sounding the alarm that funding is shifting away from health and research in favor of defense and economic competitiveness.
Executive Director Jean Georges emphasized that without a coordinated response, the economic and social strain will become unsustainable.
“The scale of this challenge is substantial. We need a coordinated European Action Plan on Dementia with ringfenced funding for a dedicated research mission. Decision-makers must invest now in health infrastructure to prevent a total system collapse.”
Priority Recommendations:
- Care Infrastructure: Rapidly expand diagnostic and long-term care capacity.
- Research Funding: Prioritize basic science to understand the condition and clinical studies for new treatments.
- Prevention: Implement public health strategies targeting risk factors like high blood pressure and social isolation.
- Support for Carers: Develop better legal and financial frameworks for the millions of informal family carers supporting the dementia population.
A Blueprint for the Future
Alongside the report, Alzheimer Europe has published interactive maps and visualisations on their website. These tools allow policymakers in individual countries—such as Germany (projected at 1.8M cases in 2025) and Italy (1.4M cases)—to visualize their specific needs through 2050.
The message is clear: the aging population isn’t a “future” problem—the groundwork for 2050 must be laid in the 2026-2027 budget cycles.
