Live US real GDP per capita (BEA) next to Eurozone real GDP (Eurostat). Quarterly data, pulled from FRED, full citations.
Last reviewed: 2026-05-21
The headline number on the left is real US GDP per capita in chained 2017 dollars, published quarterly by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). It strips out inflation and population growth, so the year-over-year change is the cleanest single number for "is the average American getting richer." The right side shows Euro area total real GDP — chain-linked, in millions of euros — sourced from Eurostat. We do not divide it by population on this page because the published series is the bloc-wide aggregate; the trajectory you see is the Eurozone's growth path, not its per-capita prosperity.
The two metrics answer adjacent but different questions. Looking at them side by side tells you whether the cycle phase is synchronized across the Atlantic, and how the levels compare in the most recent quarter. For per-capita Eurozone numbers you can divide the EA series by the Euro area population (around 343 million) — the result hovers around €37,000 per capita versus the US ~$66,000 in the latest comparable quarter.
GDP is the broadest measure of an economy, but it is also the slowest. Headline releases lag the quarter by 30–65 days, and each release gets revised at least twice. Treat the latest number as a working estimate, not a final score. The shape of the trend over the last eight quarters carries more signal than the most recent point.
Watch the divergence. Since 2010, US real GDP per capita has compounded faster than the Eurozone total — accelerating after the 2020 reopening and again through the 2022–2024 AI capex wave. A persistent gap usually shows up in equity returns, currency strength (see the USD FX tracker ), and the rate-cut path priced by markets.
If you save or invest globally — index funds, ETFs, multi-currency cash — the US-Europe growth gap is one of the structural inputs to your return. Faster US growth tends to coincide with a stronger dollar, which hurts unhedged Eurozone equity returns for a US-based investor and helps Eurozone-based investors holding US assets. The same gap shows up in interest-rate differentials and corporate earnings.
For developers and analysts, the underlying FRED series are exposed via the CalcFi data API and the /data hub with the same cache contract used to render this page.
US series: BEA NIPA Table 7.1, Line 10 (real GDP per capita), surfaced via FRED A939RX0Q048SBEA. Eurozone series: Eurostat namq_10_gdp chain-linked volumes index for EA19, surfaced via FRED CLVMNACSCAB1GQEA19. Both are pulled hourly through the unified live-data cache. CSV mirrors live on Kaggle with extended quarterly histories.
Real GDP per capita divides total inflation-adjusted output by population. The series shown here is FRED A939RX0Q048SBEA, chained 2017 dollars, published quarterly by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
They answer different questions. US real GDP per capita shows individual prosperity. Eurozone real GDP shows the bloc-wide output trajectory. We surface both because the directional comparison — who is growing faster on each metric — is what most readers want.
Both series are quarterly. BEA releases an advance estimate roughly one month after the quarter ends, then revises it twice. Eurostat publishes a flash estimate around 30 days after the quarter ends and a final estimate around 65 days after.
Chained dollars use chain-weighting to update the price reference each year. It removes inflation more accurately than a single fixed base year because the consumption basket evolves over time.
On the data shown here, US real GDP per capita has grown faster than Eurozone real GDP since 2010. The gap widened sharply after 2020. The page surfaces the live numbers — use them to update your own view.
Sources: FRED A939RX0Q048SBEA · FRED CLVMNACSCAB1GQEA19 · BEA GDP · Kaggle (US) · Kaggle (EA).