Iran war’s devastating consequences for Hungary: soaring energy costs, inflation risks and recession fears

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The US and Israel’s escalating war on Iran is no longer a distant geopolitical crisis for Hungary. With the Strait of Hormuz effectively paralysed and global oil and gas markets under severe pressure, the consequences are already feeding directly into the Hungarian economy through higher import costs, rising inflation and renewed fears over growth.

Hungary faces the biggest hit through energy imports

For Hungary, the conflict’s most immediate consequence is the sharp rise in oil and natural gas prices. Since the escalation in late February, European benchmark gas prices have surged by roughly 60–70%, while oil prices have jumped by around 50%, with Brent crude now fluctuating well above USD 100 per barrel.

According to Péter Elek’s analysis on G7, this is particularly damaging for Hungary because crude oil and gas remain among the country’s largest import items. Every additional dollar on oil and every extra euro on TTF gas prices quickly worsens Hungary’s trade balance, which had previously been one of the more stable pillars of the economy.

The result is likely to be a rapid deterioration in the country’s external balance, potentially pushing the trade surplus back into deficit in the coming months. For an economy heavily dependent on imported energy and export-led industrial production, this creates a dangerous double squeeze.

Fuel prices and household costs likely to rise again

Hungarian motorists and households are to feel the impact almost immediately. Wholesale fuel prices have already been climbing sharply across Europe, with Hungary among the exposed Central European markets. Similar price shocks in early March already translated into visible rises at domestic petrol stations.

If the Strait of Hormuz disruption continues, the pressure will not stop at the pumps. Higher gas procurement costs could also spill into household heating bills, electricity prices and the cost base of Hungarian businesses.

This raises the risk of a second inflation wave just as Hungary had been trying to stabilise prices after previous energy shocks.

Inflation may return as the forint comes under pressure

The war’s larger financial market consequences may be equally severe for Hungary. Rising global energy prices historically weaken regional currencies, and the forint tends to be especially sensitive to risk-off periods and worsening external balances.

A prolonged conflict could therefore create a renewed inflationary spiral through three channels:

  • more expensive imported energy
  • a weaker forint
  • rising transport and logistics costs

For Hungary, this combination is particularly dangerous because inflation has been one of the most politically and economically sensitive issues in recent years.

Growth outlook darkens for Hungary’s industry

Hungary’s manufacturing-heavy economy is especially vulnerable to an energy-driven slowdown. Car plants, battery factories, logistics hubs and chemical industries all face significantly higher operating costs when gas and oil remain elevated for months.

With Europe already warning of slower growth and possible stagflation risks from the Hormuz crisis, Hungary could be among the countries hit hardest in Central Europe.

The longer the shipping disruption lasts, the greater the risk that Hungary’s industrial output, exports and investment sentiment begin to weaken.

Credit rating pressure could intensify

Another major concern for Hungary is how rating agencies may interpret the deteriorating macroeconomic environment.

A worsening trade balance, slower growth, higher inflation and a more fragile currency are exactly the type of pressures that could complicate future sovereign credit reviews. Even if no immediate downgrade follows, the conflict materially worsens the backdrop against which Hungary’s fiscal and external vulnerabilities are assessed.

If you missed it: Fuel restrictions imposed in Hungary: are we running out?

Why this matters more for Hungary than for others

While the Iran war is a global crisis, Hungary’s dependence on imported energy makes the country more exposed than many Western economies.

Unlike larger states with broader domestic energy buffers or stronger fiscal room, Hungary is highly sensitive to imported oil, gas and exchange-rate volatility. Every additional day of disruption in the Gulf effectively acts as an “energy tax” on the Hungarian economy.

That is why this conflict could become one of the most significant external economic threats Hungary faces in 2026.

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3 Comments

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