The Euribor rate rose this Tuesday for the three, six, and 12-month terms compared to Monday, with the longest term reaching its highest level since January 2025. With these changes, the three-month rate, which advanced to 2.138%, remained below the six-month (2.295%) and 12-month (2.552%) rates.
Euribor rises across all maturities. 12-month rate hits highest level since January 2025
Tuesday, 10 March 2026RSS

Context & Explainers
Euribor (Euro Interbank Offered Rate) is the benchmark interest rate at which European banks lend to one another and is widely used as the reference for variable‑rate mortgages in Portugal. Changes affect monthly payments directly: the recent figures reported were 2.034% (3‑month), 2.104% (6‑month) and 2.255% (12‑month), so a rising Euribor typically increases costs for borrowers with tracker or variable loans.









