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市场调查报告书
商品编码
1851245
欧洲网路安全:市场占有率分析、产业趋势、统计数据和成长预测(2025-2030 年)Europe Cybersecurity - Market Share Analysis, Industry Trends & Statistics, Growth Forecasts (2025 - 2030) |
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欧洲网路安全市场预计到 2025 年将达到 631.2 亿美元,到 2030 年将达到 1,054.5 亿美元。

强制法规、日益加剧的地缘政治风险以及向自主云端平台加速转型,正推动网路安全在整个全部区域从可选项跃升为核心业务支出。网路与资讯安全指令2 (NIS2) 和数位营运弹性法案 (DORA) 的实施为支出计画提供了支持,而俄乌衝突导致勒索软体事件增加了30%,并提高了企业高阶主管的风险意识。云端优先策略依然强劲,混合部署推动成长,企业在主权和规模之间寻求平衡。合规性要求促使供应商整合,以获取事件回应和託管服务能力。然而,29.9万名技能人才的缺口,加上日益激烈的竞争,正使企业内部安全团队不堪重负,并推动企业采用託管服务。
NIS2 的适用范围扩大至超过 16 万家欧洲公司,并引入了最高可达 1000 万欧元或全球营业额 2% 的罚款。 DORA 对金融机构施加了类似的 ICT 风险义务,迫使像 Belfius 这样的银行重建稳健的供应商组合。这项法律范围导致平均安全支出达到 IT 预算的 9%,89% 的公司表示需要招募新员工。整合平台和託管服务能够带来最大的益处,简化多司法管辖区彙报流程,确保合规性,并降低罚款风险。
2024年,针对欧洲组织的勒索软体攻击增加了30%,威胁行为者利用地缘政治紧张局势进行攻击。 2025年第一季,製造业遭受的攻击增加了84%,资料外洩造成的损失超过556万美元,超过了以往危机时期的损失。 2023年,医疗保健产业遭受的攻击事件达到309起,其中一半是由勒索软体造成的。像LockBit这样的持续性勒索软体组织在被查封之前发动了1700次攻击,这凸显了基于行为的侦测和分层回应服务的必要性。
欧洲面临超过29.9万名合格网路安全专业人员的缺口,现有从业人员有76%缺乏正式资格。儘管德国网路安全支出实现了两位数成长,但仍难以填补职缺;法国预计也将出现1.5万个职缺,儘管其年薪已接近9.81万美元。技能短缺正在拖慢计划部署速度,尤其是在云端安全和营运技术(OT)保护领域,迫使企业转向託管式侦测和回应服务,以取代内部自建能力。
到2024年,解决方案将占据欧洲网路安全市场份额的68%,这主要得益于整合平台,这些平台将云端、身分和网路控制整合到一个统一的主机中。预计到2030年,欧洲网路安全市场规模将以13.8%的复合年增长率成长,主要驱动力是包括託管检测和回应在内的服务。 NIS2调查显示,中型企业预计将强劲成长,因为他们更倾向于单一订阅服务包,而不是多供应商套件包。
託管服务提供者客製合规仪表板,实现欧盟多元化管理体制下的证据收集自动化。同时,随着大型银行和製造商建构零信任参考模型和后量子时代蓝图,对专业服务的需求仍然强劲。整合工作流程自动化和原生彙报的整合解决方案供应商享有交叉销售优势,而细分领域产品的供应商则面临整合压力。
到2024年,云端采用将占总收入的57.5%,因为企业正在寻求增强系统弹性并持续更新。混合模式将以15.2%的复合年增长率成为成长最快的模式,因为主权规则要求企业在利用全球超大规模分析的同时,将敏感资料保留在欧盟境内。随着金融机构试行量子安全都会区网路,将金钥保留在本地,同时将远端检测传送到主权云中的分析引擎,欧洲混合架构的网路安全市场规模正在扩大。
对于需要完全控制硬体的国防和公共部门工作负载,本地部署仍然普遍存在。但即使是这些环境也在整合云端基础的威胁情报来源,并创建混合拓扑结构。因此,供应商正在将相同的策略引擎打包到 SaaS 和设备等不同形态的产品中,使管理员能够无论工作负载位于何处,都能实施统一的控制措施。
欧洲网路安全市场细分报告按产品(解决方案、服务)、部署类型(本地部署、云端部署)、最终用户垂直行业(银行、金融服务和保险、医疗保健、IT 和电信、工业和国防、製造业、零售和电子商务、能源和公共产业、製造业、其他)、最终用户公司规模(中小企业、大型企业)和国家/地区对行业进行分类。
The Europe cybersecurity market size stands at USD 63.12 billion in 2025 and is forecast to reach USD 105.45 billion by 2030, reflecting a 10.81% CAGR through the period.

Mandatory regulation, rising geopolitical risk, and an accelerating shift to sovereign cloud platforms elevate cybersecurity from optional spend to core operational outlay across the region. Enforcement of the Network and Information Security Directive 2 (NIS2) and the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) anchors spending plans, while the Russia-Ukraine conflict fuels a 30% rise in ransomware incidents that heightens board-level risk awareness. Cloud-first strategies persist, yet hybrid deployments gain traction as enterprises balance sovereignty with scale. Vendor consolidation intensifies as suppliers acquire incident-response and managed-services capabilities to meet compliance demand. Heightened competition, however, is tempered by a 299,000-professional skills deficit that stretches internal security teams and bolsters managed service uptake.
NIS2 expands coverage to more than 160,000 European entities and introduces penalties of up to EUR 10 million or 2% of global turnover, which is shifting cybersecurity budgets from discretionary to compulsory . DORA imposes parallel ICT-risk mandates on financial entities, forcing banks such as Belfius to restructure vendor portfolios for resilience. The legal scope drives average security spending to 9% of IT budgets, while 89% of firms report new hiring needs. Integration-ready platforms and managed services benefit most because they streamline multi-jurisdiction reporting, sustain compliance, and reduce penalty exposure.
Ransomware attacks on European organizations climbed 30% in 2024 as threat actors weaponized geopolitical tensions. Manufacturing bore 84% growth in strike volume during Q1 2025 with breach costs topping USD 5.56 million, eclipsing previous crisis-era losses. Healthcare incidents reached 309 in 2023, half involving ransomware, prompting an EU action plan that allocates additional incident-response resources. Persistent groups such as LockBit executed 1,700 attacks before takedown efforts, underlining the need for behavior-based detection and layered response services.
Europe lacks more than 299,000 qualified cybersecurity professionals, and 76% of existing staff possess no formal credentials. Germany posts double-digit growth in spending yet struggles to fill vacancies, while France expects 15,000 open roles despite salaries approaching USD 98,100. Skills scarcity slows project rollouts, particularly in cloud security and OT protection, compelling enterprises to shift toward managed detection and response as a substitute for in-house capability.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Solutions accounted for 68% of the Europe cybersecurity market share in 2024, underpinned by integrated platforms that bundle cloud, identity, and network controls into unified consoles. The Europe cybersecurity market size for services, including managed detection and response, is projected to expand at a 13.8% CAGR to 2030 as enterprises offset workforce shortages by outsourcing daily operations. High-growth comes from mid-market firms newly covered under NIS2 that prefer single-subscription service bundles over multi-vendor toolkits.
Managed services providers tailor compliance dashboards that automate evidence collection across the EU's heterogeneous regulatory regimes. Concurrently, professional-services demand remains steady as large banks and manufacturers architect zero-trust reference models and post-quantum roadmaps. Integrated solution vendors that embed workflow automation and native reporting enjoy cross-sell advantage, while niche point-product suppliers face consolidation pressure.
Cloud deployments represented 57.5% of 2024 revenue as enterprises embraced elasticity and evergreen updates. Hybrid models now register the swiftest 15.2% CAGR because sovereignty rules compel companies to retain sensitive data inside EU borders while still tapping global hyperscaler analytics. The Europe cybersecurity market size for hybrid architectures grows as financial institutions pilot quantum-secure metro networks that keep keys on premises yet route telemetry to analytics engines in sovereign clouds.
On-premise installations persist in defense and public-sector workloads that require full control of hardware. Yet even these environments integrate cloud-based threat intelligence feeds, creating blended topologies. Vendors therefore package identical policy engines across SaaS and appliance form factors so administrators can enforce uniform controls regardless of workload location.
The Europe Cybersecurity Market Report Segments the Industry Into by Offering (Solutions, and Services), Deployment Mode (On-Premise, and Cloud), End-User Vertical (BFSI, Healthcare, IT and Telecom, Industrial and Defense, Manufacturing, Retail and E-Commerce, Energy and Utilities, Manufacturing, and Others), and End-User Enterprise Size (Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), and Large Enterprises). And Country.