NACE is the standard statistical classification of economic activities used across the European Union for classifying economic activities.
The term NACE is derived from the French for Nomenclature of Economic Activities (NACE) and it groups organisations, companies, and people by their business activity to provide consistent statistics on production, employment, and national accounts across Europe.
The CSO submits data to Eurostat using NACE classifications.
Since the last version of NACE, NACE Rev. 2, was published in 2006, the European economy has evolved significantly, leading to a need to update the NACE classification. NACE Rev. 2.1 has introduced new concepts at all levels of the classification, and has restructured a number of the existing headings. At the same time, major efforts have been made to maintain the structure of the classification in areas that did not explicitly require change based on new concepts.
From Q1 2026 onwards the CSO Labour Force Survey will begin to be published using NACE Rev. 2.1. as the primary primary classification of industrial sectors. Estimates using NACE Rev. 2.0. will no longer be published in the statistical publication but will still be published for reference year 2026 on our PxStat and supplementary tables. NACE Rev. 2.1. was backcast to reference year 2019 to allow for time series analysis and seasonally adjusted estimation.
NACE Rev. 2.1 entails several changes, including a number of new positions to reflect emerging forms of economic activity. Structurally, the most obvious change is that the previous Section J “Information and Communication” is now being split into two separate sections: Section J for “Publishing, broadcasting, and content production and distribution activities” and Section K for “Telecommunication, computer programming, consulting, computing infrastructure and other information service activities”. Table 1 shows the change to sectors based on the updated classification. It shows that the largest change was in NACE G Wholesale & Retail Trade. Under NACE Rev.2.1, those involved in the repair of repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles are now classified in S-V Other NACE activities.
There are many other changes seen across all the lower structural levels of the classification (Division, Group and Class levels). Conceptually, significant changes occurred with the introduction of new concepts at all levels, revised rules for outsourcing and with the treatment of intermediation activities. See the NACE Rev. 2.1 changes FAQs webpage for further information on what to expect as the CSO moves to the new version of NACE.
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