NorDan Ireland, the Irish arm of the Scandinavian window and door manufacturer, has reported turnover of €63.9 million for 2025, up from €48 million in 2024. Headcount over the same period rose from 108 to 146.
The growth comes against a backdrop of widely reported delays, funding pressures and stalled housing schemes across Irish construction. NorDan’s figures suggest the picture inside the supply chain is more layered than the headline narrative implies.
The company invested €4.07 million in its Irish operations in 2025, with a further €1.2 million committed for 2026. That follows €573,000 in 2024 and €445,000 in 2023, marking a near tenfold increase in annual investment over two years.
NorDan currently supplies some of the country’s largest contractors, including John Sisk & Son Ltd., Cairn Homes, Walls Construction and Bennett Construction, working across residential and commercial developments while also serving a fast-growing replacement and upgrade market.
Brian Cleary, Financial Director at NorDan Ireland, said the growth reflects a market that has become more selective rather than one that has stopped.
“What we are seeing is not a market that has stalled completely. It is a market that has become more focused. Some projects are delayed, but others are moving ahead, and there is also steady demand coming from upgrade work, where energy performance, durability and long-term value have become much more important for owners, developers and contractors alike.
“From our perspective, that means continuing to invest in people, capability and delivery so that we are in a position to support customers across both new-build and refurbishment work.”
The pattern points to a two-track market. New-build activity is concentrated around well-capitalised developers and tier-one contractors with the scale to push schemes through, while a parallel stream of demand is coming from owners and asset managers upgrading existing stock to meet rising expectations on energy performance and building quality.