Key Points
GDP slipped 0.2% in July–September versus the prior quarter, ending eight straight quarters of sequential growth, while still rising 1.2% from a year earlier.
The telling split was demand: consumption rose 1.9%, but investment dropped 8.9%, a warning sign for future jobs and building.
Analysts are watching Q4 and even October data for proof this is a pause, not the start of a slower cycle.
Uruguay is used to being the steady outlier in a volatile neighborhood. That is why a small contraction in the third quarter of 2025 landed with outsized meaning.
The Central Bank’s national accounts showed GDP edging down 0.2% from the previous quarter after seasonal adjustment, snapping an eight-quarter run of quarter-to-quarter gains. Year-on-year growth stayed positive at 1.2%. But the direction changed.
The story behind the headline is not a sudden collapse in spending. It is a change in confidence. On the demand side, final consumption increased 1.9%. People kept buying, traveling, and living normally.
The shock came from investment. Gross capital formation fell 8.9%. When firms and developers pull back, the effects often arrive later, through fewer projects, weaker hiring, and slower productivity.
Uruguay’s Quiet Slowdown: Why A Small GDP Dip Matters Far Beyond Montevideo. (Photo Internet reproduction)
The sector mix adds color. Consumer-facing activity was strong. Commerce, accommodation and food services grew 5.4%. Financial services rose 3.0%. Electricity, gas and water increased 2.2%.
The weak points were the parts tied to building and producing. Construction fell 3.1%. Industry fell 2.1%. Agriculture, fishing and mining slipped 0.2%.
Economists describe 2025 as a year that started stronger and cooled as it went. Aldo Lema of Vixion Consultores said growth has gone “from more to less,” and put average 2025 growth around 2%, below the government’s 2.6% budget assumption.
He also argued the slowdown likely extended into October, with the monthly activity indicator expected to show a year-on-year contraction. There is a plausible rebound story, too.
Lema pointed to a potential lift in the fourth quarter from ANCAP’s refinery returning to normal, seasonal tourism, and a better contribution from parts of agriculture. José Luis Licandro said the economy has been close to flat since the first quarter, with a broad-based deceleration.
Deborah Eilender at CED called 2025 a “normalization” year, and said growth is running below potential. Exante also stressed that the cooling was general across sectors.
For readers abroad, the takeaway is simple. Uruguay is a small, open economy that reacts quickly to investment cycles, regional demand, and industrial disruptions. When it slows, it can be an early signal of tighter margins and tougher decisions across the Southern Cone.

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