Rottaprint, Romania’s largest flexographic printing house producing self-adhesive labels and flexible packaging, a family-owned company with 100 percent local capital, closed 2025 with a turnover of approximately RON 195 million, marking an increase of over 3 percent compared to 2024.
This growth was driven by higher production volumes, expanded exports, and continuous investments in technology and team development.
In 2025, the company recorded a production volume increase of more than 5 percent year-over-year, supported by steady demand and the development of new market segments. The food industry remained the main driver of its client portfolio, particularly in dairy and cheese, meat processing, bakery, fruit and vegetable, and confectionery sectors, where Rottaprint further strengthened its expertise and product range.
Exports accounted for 23 percent of Rottaprint’s activity in 2025, up 5 percent from the previous year. Germany and Hungary remained the main foreign markets, while Rottaprint products reached a total of 20 countries across the European Union, as well as the United States and Asia, confirming the consolidation of its international presence.
“In 2025, we invested €2 million in modernizing our machinery, implementing new technologies, and expanding our team to meet our customers’ increasingly complex requirements. Today, they seek both visual quality and functional solutions that support faster production lines. Our role is to develop labels perfectly adapted to each technological flow, and through our team’s expertise we provide customized solutions and technical support so that our products directly contribute to our clients’ process efficiency,” said Cristi Nechita-Rotta, General Manager of Rottaprint.
For 2026, the company aims to increase customer retention and maintain a high level of satisfaction, after achieving an NPS score of 97 on the Romanian market in 2025. Revenue is forecast to grow by approximately 10 percent, mainly supported by export expansion, particularly to Germany, Hungary, Austria, and the Netherlands.
On the Romanian market, the company anticipates a year marked by economic uncertainty and increasing pressure on productivity and quality standards.
