From January 2026: Minimum Wage in Bulgaria to Rise by 12.6%, Reaching 620 Euros
The Bulgarian government has finalized the minimum wage for 2026, setting it at 1,213 leva (620.20 euros) per month, effective January 1
Meeting with North Macedonia's Foreign Minister Bujar Osmani on Tuesday, Prime Minister Boyko Borissov said: "All differences between Bulgaria and the Republic of North Macedonia should be ironed out. The future generations will not forgive us if we miss this great opportunity." Borissov was adamant that the progress of the Republic of North Macedonia and Albania to EU accession should not be delayed, therefore the differences between Sofia and Skopje should be resolved, the Government Information Service here reported.
Borissov told Osmani: "Both countries should prepare for negotiations led by reason, not emotions, so that our neighbours can join the EU. This is Bulgaria's geostrategic goal, the point is that both we and you should find the political will."
The Bulgarian Prime Minister said both countries should follow the path of diplomacy and understanding. "The heroes who fell
for freedom cannot be the subject that divides us because they cherished the dream that we would be together and sacrificed
their life for this. They should be a bridge of friendship, not of separation," he stressed.
Borissov reaffirmed Bulgaria's principled support for the EU integration of its neighbor to the southwest, provided the
respective conditions are met. He stressed the need of implementing all commitments arising from the Treaty of
Friendship, Good Neighbourliness and Cooperation signed by Bulgaria and Macedonia in 2017.
Borissov and Osmani also discussed bilateral relations, the European prospects of the Republic of North Macedonia, and the pandemic's challenges./BTA
At the close of the third quarter of 2025, the average gross salary in Bulgaria’s state administration reached 3,088 leva (approx. €1,580), marking an increase of 417 leva (€213) compared to the same period in 2024, when it was 2,671 leva (€1,365)
Bulgaria’s economic landscape is shaped by 16 major centers that concentrate 80% of the country’s economic activity and three-quarters of the population,
The Bulgarian Council of Ministers announced that authorities have begun imposing fines on traders found to be raising prices without justification
Lukoil has announced that all of its gas stations across Bulgaria are operating as usual and will continue to do so without interruption
Martin Vladimirov, director of the Geoeconomics Program at the Center for the Study of Democracy, said in an interview with the Bulgarian National Radio that the most beneficial outcome for Bulgaria would be for a strategic Western investor to acquire Luk
Ryanair has officially ended the use of paper boarding passes
Bulgaria's Strategic Role in the EU's Drone Wall Defense Initiative
When Politics Means Violence