Santander: H1'25 Earnings Overview

    Santander: H1'25 Earnings Overview

    F5 days ago 3

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    H1’25 Earnings 
Presentation
30 July 2025
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Important information
Non-IFRS and alternative performance measures
Banco Santander, S.A. (“Santander”) cautions that this document may contain financial information prepared according to International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and taken from our consolidated financial
statements, as well as alternative performance measures (APMs) as defined in the Guidelines on Alternative Performance Measures issued by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) on 5 October 2015,
and other non-IFRS measures. The APMs and non-IFRS measures were calculated with information from Grupo Santander; however, they are neither defined or detailed in the applicable financial reporting framework
nor audited or reviewed by our auditors. We use the APMs and non-IFRS measures when planning, monitoring and evaluating our performance. We consider them to be useful metrics for our management and investors
to compare operating performance between accounting periods.
Nonetheless, the APMs and non-IFRS measures are supplemental information; their purpose is not to substitute the IFRS measures. Furthermore, companies in our industry and others may calculate or use APMs and
non-IFRS measures differently, thus making them less useful for comparison purposes. APMs using environmental, social and governance labels have not been calculated in accordance with the Taxonomy Regulation or
with the indicators for principal adverse impact in SFDR.
For more details on APMs and non-IFRS measures, please see the 2024 Annual Report on Form 20-F filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) on 28 February 2025
(https://www.santander.com/content/dam/santander-com/en/documentos/informacion-sobre-resultados-semestrales-y-anuales-suministrada-a-la-sec/2025/sec-2024-annual-20-f-2024-en.pdf), as well as the
section “Alternative performance measures” of Banco Santander, S.A. (Santander) Q2 2025 Financial Report, published on 30 July 2025 (https://www.santander.com/en/shareholders-and-investors/financial-andeconomic-information#quarterly-results).
Sustainability information
This document may contain, in addition to financial information, sustainability-related information, including environmental, social and governance-related metrics, statements, goals, targets, commitments and
opinions. Sustainability information is not audited nor reviewed by an external auditor. Sustainability information is prepared following various external and internal frameworks, reporting guidelines and measurement,
collection and verification methods and practices, which may materially differ from those applicable to financial information and are in many cases emerging and evolving. Sustainability information is based on various
materiality thresholds, estimates, assumptions, judgments and underlying data derived internally and from third parties. Sustainability information is thus subject to significant measurement uncertainties may not be
comparable to sustainability information of other companies or over time or across periods and its use is not meant to imply that the information is fit for any particular purpose or that it is material to us under
mandatory reporting standards. The sustainability information is for informational purposes only, without any liability being accepted in connection with it except where such liability cannot be limited under overriding
provisions of applicable law.
Forward-looking statements
Santander hereby warns that this document may contain 'forward-looking statements', as defined by the US Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements can be understood through words and
expressions like 'expect', 'project', 'anticipate', 'should', 'intend', 'probability', 'risk', 'VaR', 'RoRAC', 'RoRWA', 'TNAV', 'target', 'goal', 'objective', 'estimate', 'future', 'ambition', 'aspiration', 'commitment', 'commit', 'focus',
'pledge' and similar expressions. They include (but are not limited to) statements on future business development, shareholder remuneration policy and NFI. However, risks, uncertainties and other important factors
may lead to developments and results that differ materially from those anticipated, expected, projected or assumed in forward-looking statements. The important factors below (and others mentioned in this
document), as well as other unknown or unpredictable factors, could affect our future development and results and could lead to outcomes materially different from what our forward-looking statements anticipate,
expect, project or assume:
• general economic or industry conditions (e.g., an economic downturn; higher volatility in the capital markets; inflation; deflation; changes in demographics, consumer spending, investment or saving habits; and the
effects of the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East or the outbreak of public health emergencies in the global economy) in areas where we have significant operations or investments;
• exposure to market risks (e.g., risks from interest rates, foreign exchange rates, equity prices and new benchmark indices);
• potential losses from early loan repayment, collateral depreciation or counterparty risk;
• political instability in Spain, the UK, other European countries, Latin America and the US;
• changes in monetary, fiscal and immigration policies and trade tensions, including the imposition of tariffs and retaliatory responses;
• legislative, regulatory or tax changes (including regulatory capital and liquidity requirements) and greater regulation prompted by financial crises;
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Important information
• acquisitions, integrations, divestitures and challenges arising from deviating management’s resources and attention from other strategic opportunities and operational matters;
• climate-related conditions, regulations, targets and weather events;
• uncertainty over the scope of actions that may be required by us, governments and other to achieve goals relating to climate, environmental and social matters, as well as the evolving nature of underlying science and
potential conflicts and inconsistencies among governmental standards and regulations. Important factors affecting sustainability information may materially differ from those applicable to financial information.
Sustainability information is based on various materiality thresholds, estimates, assumptions, judgments and underlying data derived internally and from third parties. Sustainability information is thus subject to
significant measurement uncertainties, may not be comparable to sustainability information of other companies or over time or across periods and its inclusion is not meant to imply that the information is fit for any
particular purpose or that it is material to us under mandatory reporting standards. The sustainability information is for informational purposes only, without any liability being accepted in connection with it except
where such liability cannot be limited under overriding provisions of applicable law;
• our own decisions and actions, including those affecting or changing our practices, operations, priorities, strategies, policies or procedures;
• changes affecting our access to liquidity and funding on acceptable terms, especially due to credit spread shifts or credit rating downgrade for the entire group or core subsidiaries;
• our exposure to operational losses; and
• potential losses associated with cyberattacks, data breaches, data losses and other security incidents
Forward looking statements are based on current expectations and future estimates about Santander’s and third-parties’ operations and businesses and address matters that are uncertain to varying degrees, including,
but not limited to developing standards that may change in the future; plans, projections, expectations, targets, objectives, strategies and goals relating to environmental, social, safety and governance performance,
including expectations regarding future execution of Santander’s and third parties’ energy and climate strategies, and the underlying assumptions and estimated impacts on Santander’s and third-parties’ businesses
related thereto; Santander’s and third-parties’ approach, plans and expectations in relation to carbon use and targeted reductions of emissions; changes in operations or investments under existing or future
environmental laws and regulations; and changes in government regulations and regulatory requirements, including those related to climate-related initiatives.
Forward-looking statements are aspirational, should be regarded as indicative, preliminary and for illustrative purposes only, speak only as of the date of this document and are informed by the knowledge, information
and views available on such date and are subject to change without notice. Banco Santander is not required to update or revise any forward-looking statements, regardless of new information, future events or
otherwise, except as required by applicable law.
Past performance does not indicate future outcomes
Statements about historical performance or growth rates must not be construed as suggesting that future performance, share price or earnings (including earnings per share) will necessarily be the same or higher than
in a previous period. Nothing mentioned in this document should be taken as a profit and loss forecast.
Not a securities offer
This document and the information it contains, does not constitute an offer to sell nor the solicitation of an offer to buy any securities.
Third Party Information
In particular, regarding the data provided by third parties, neither Santander, nor any of its directors, managers or employees, either explicitly or implicitly, guarantees that these contents are exact, accurate,
comprehensive or complete, nor are they obliged to keep them updated, nor to correct them in the case that any deficiency, error or omission were to be detected. Moreover, in reproducing these contents in by any
means, Santander may introduce any changes it deems suitable, and may omit, partially or completely, any of the elements of this document, and in case of any deviation, Santander assumes no liability for any
discrepancy.
Sale of 49% stake in Santander Bank Polska to Erste Group
All figures, including P&L, loans and advances to customers, customer funds and other metrics are presented on an underlying basis and include Santander Bank Polska, in line with previously published quarterly
information, i.e. maintaining the same perimeter that existed at the time of the announcement of the sale of 49% stake in Santander Bank Polska to Erste Group (https://www.santander.com/content/dam/santandercom/en/documentos/informacion-privilegiada/2025/05/hr-2025-05-05-santander-announces-the-sale-of-49-per-cent-of-santander-polska-to-erste-group-bank-and-agrees-strategic-cooperation-across-cib-andpayments-en.pdf). For further information, see the 'Significant events in the period’ and 'Alternative performance measures' sections of Banco Santander, S.A. (Santander) Q2 2025 Financial Report, published on 30 July
2025 (https://www.santander.com/en/shareholders-and-investors/financial-and-economic-information#quarterly-results).
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Index
H1'25 Highlights
Progress on our strategy
1
Group review
2
Final remarks
3
Appendix
4
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Well ahead on all our strengthened Investor Day 2025 targets
Payout RoTE post-AT1
CET1 RWAs with RoRWA > CoE
Note: our current ordinary shareholder remuneration policy is to distribute approximately 50% of Group reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), distributed approximately 50% in cash dividend and 50%
in share buybacks. Execution of the shareholder remuneration policy is subject to future corporate and regulatory decisions and approvals.
(1) Share buyback target against 2025-26 results as well as to the expected excess capital. This share buyback target includes: i) the buybacks resulting from the application of our existing shareholder remuneration policy plus ii)
additional buybacks to distribute excesses of our CET1 (including 50% of the capital released from the disposal of its 49% stake in Santander Bank Polska S.A). The execution of share buybacks is subject to future corporate and
regulatory decisions and approvals. For more information, see notes 1 and 2 on slide 57.
H1’25 vs. 2025 ID targets (incl. upgrades in Q4’24)
STRENGTH
13% | operating range: 12-13% 
DISCIPLINED CAPITAL ALLOCATION
c.85%
SHAREHOLDER REMUNERATION
Cash dividend + 
SBB 50% annually
PROFITABILITY
50%
c.16.5%
At least €10bn
Total SBB 2025-261
TNAVps + DPS
Double-digit growth 
average through-the-cycle 
13.0% 88% 16.0% +16%
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Record H1 profit, with all global businesses contributing to our 2025 targets
Q2’25 att. profit H1’25 att. profit
Efficiency RoTE post-AT1
CoR CET1
TNAVps + Cash DPS
Another record quarter resulting in double-digit H1 profit growth,
with 8 million new customers YoY and high activity levels
Strong operating performance and profitability 
on the back of ONE Transformation
Solid balance sheet with robust credit quality and 
organic capital build
Capital productivity and disciplined capital allocation driving 
profitability and double-digit shareholder value creation
YoY
41.5% 1.14% 16.0% 13.0% +16% -7bps -0.1pp +0.9pp Note: YoY changes. In constant euros: Q2’25 attributable profit +13% and H1’25 attributable profit +18%. 
CET1 ratio on phased-in basis, i.e. in accordance with the transitory treatment of the CRR. YoY comparison based on published Jun-24 ratio (calculated on a fully-loaded basis).
TNAVps + Cash DPS includes the €10.00 cent cash dividend per share paid in November 2024 and €11.00 cent cash per share paid in May 2025, executed as part of our shareholder remuneration policy.
+13% €3.4bn +7% €6.8bn
+0.5pp
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Excellent business and 
commercial dynamics 
Strong revenue performance supporting net operating income and profit growth
• Solid NII and record fees
• Strong net operating income growth
• CoR and RoTE improvement YoY
Note: H1’25 ‘attributable profit' and 'underlying attributable profit’ were the same, as the ‘net capital gains and provisions’ line was zero since it includes two events that fall outside the 
ordinary course of our business, with equal value but opposite signs. For more information, see slide 53.
All references to variations in constant euros across the presentation include Argentina in current euros to mitigate distortions from a hyperinflationary economy. For further information, 
see the ‘Alternative Performance Measures’ section of the Quarterly Financial Report.
Group P&L Current Constant Current Constant
€ million H1'25 H1'24 % % % %
NII 22,716 23,457 -3 1 -1 4
Net fee income 6,684 6,477 3 9 0 6
Other income 1,610 1,116 44 48 4 6
Total revenue 31,010 31,050 -0 5 -1 4
Operating expenses -12,865 -12,913 -0 4 -1 3
Net operating income 18,145 18,137 0 5 -0 5
LLPs -6,178 -6,243 -1 6 -3 4
Other results -1,664 -2,386 -30 -28 -26 -24
Attributable profit 6,833 6,059 13 18 13 19
Group Group excl. Argentina
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Consistent execution of ONE Transformation is driving higher revenue and lower costs …
• Wealth: collaboration fees with 
CIB and Corporates reached 
€2.1bn (+8% vs. H1’24)
• Consumer: expansion of OEM 
agreements
• Multi-Nationals: +3% YoY 
revenue growth
• Product simplification: 42% fewer 
products vs. Jun-24 (-55% vs. Dec-22)
• 66% products / services digitally 
available (59% Jun-24; 56% Dec-23)
• US: $270mn efficiencies captured 
in Consumer and Commercial since 
2022
• Global approach to technology: 
€90mn efficiencies in H1’25 
(€542mn since Dec-22)
- Gravity (back-end) efficiencies
- Process optimization
- Global vendor agreements
- IT&Ops shared-services
-243bps -104bps -87bps
ONE Transformation Global & Network 
businesses1
Global Tech 
FY’22 capabilities & others H1’25
Note: H1’25 or latest available data.
(1) As defined at the 2023 Investor Day.
Efficiency 
execution
2022-H1’25
Reminder from 
Investor Day
Efficiency
2022-2025
200-250bps
c. 42% 100-150bps
50-75bps
FY’22 2025 ID target
45.8% 41.5% 45.8%
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15.7 39.4% 3.7
+2% +0.2pp +14%
6.4 41.5% 1.0
+2% +0.9pp -1%
4.4 43.7% 1.5
+9% +0.4pp +15%
2.0 35.7% 0.9
+14% -1.5pp +24%
2.8 42.2% 0.3
+17% -4.6pp +47%*
31.0 41.5% 6.8
+5% -0.1pp +18%
+2.7pp
17.2%
+0.2pp
10.4%
-1.5pp
20.8%
16.0%
+0.9pp
67.3%
-7.0pp
28.8%
+8.7pp
… supported by solid revenue growth across our 5 global businesses
Note: YoY changes in constant euros.
(*) Payments YoY variation excluding the PagoNxt write-downs in Q2’24 of our investments related to our merchant platform in Germany and Superdigital in Latin America (€243mn, net of tax and minority interests).
Contribution to Group revenue as a percentage of total operating areas, excluding the Corporate Centre. Global businesses’ RoTEs are adjusted based on Group’s deployed capital; targets have been adjusted for AT1 costs.
GROUP
CONSUMER
CIB
WEALTH
PAYMENTS
RETAIL
Revenue
(€ bn)
Contribution to 
Group revenue H1’25 Efficiency Profit
(€ bn)
c.17% 
c.12%
c.20% 
c.60% 
>30% 
c.16.5%
RoTE post-AT1
PagoNxt EBITDA margin
RoTE post-AT1
Profitability 
2025 targets
Profitability
H1’25
50%
20%
14%
7%
9%
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H1’25 FINANCIALS
Note: data and YoY changes in constant euros.
(1) Metrics cover all products and employees in the branch network in our 10 main countries.
Retail: another quarter of strong YoY profit growth on the back of solid fee performance 
and better credit quality, as we become a digital bank with branches
# of
products1(k)
# of non-commercial FTEs1
per mn total customers
Active
customers (mn)
Operational leverage KEY DRIVERS
(€ mn, % vs. H1’24)
Revenue Costs
Deposits
€643bn
+3%
CoR
0.89%
-13bps
Efficiency
39.4%
+0.2pp
Profit
€3,687mn
+14%
RoTE post-AT1
17.2%
+0.2pp
Loans
€599bn
-1%
3,104 2,947 3,039 3,298 3,075 3,113
Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2
77.2
80.0
Jun-24 Jun-25
+2% +2% +4% -42%
7,625 7,831 7,841 8,108 7,807 7,903
Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2
• ONE Transformation is delivering solid results as reflected in fee
growth (+8%), digital sales (+16%) and higher RoTE (17.2%)
• Loan performance reflecting our focus on profitability. Generalized 
growth in deposits, supported by stronger transactionality as we 
improve customer engagement
• Strong profit increase driven by revenue growth (both NII and fees), 
cost control and enhanced credit quality
In real terms
-1% -14% 605 517
Jun-24 Jun-25
7.8
4.5
Jun-24 Jun-25
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• We continue to enhance Openbank’s value proposition since its 
recent launch in the US, Mexico and Germany
• Loans up, driven by auto. Strong deposit growth, both in DCBE 
and DCB US, is helping us to lower funding costs
• Profit +16% QoQ, boosted by NII (+4%, margin management), fees 
(auto servicing in the US), with good underlying LLP trends in the US, 
model updates in Brazil and portfolio sales, while costs remained flat
H1’25 FINANCIALS
Note: data and YoY changes in constant euros.
ANEAs: average net earning assets, including renting.
Consumer: strong profit growth in the quarter and successful deposit gathering
Retail deposit
cost-to-serve (%)
Operating expenses / 
ANEAs (%)
Operational leverage KEY DRIVERS
(€ bn)
Revenue Costs Loan-to-deposit ratio (%)
Optimized funding structure
Total
customers (mn)
Loans
€211bn
+2%
Deposits
€130bn
+10%
Efficiency
41.5%
+0.9pp
Profit
€1,042mn
-1%
RoTE post-AT1
10.4%
-1.5pp
CoR
2.09%
-8bps
+2% +3%
6.3 6.4 
H1'24 H1'25
168
156
Jun-24 Jun-25
-12pp
25.0 25.9
Jun-24 Jun-25
+4% 2.6 2.7 
H1'24 H1'25
+16% 
vs. Q1’25
In real 
terms
+1%
0.99 0.89
H1'24 H1'25
-10% 2.48 2.44
H1'24 H1'25
-1%
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H1’25 FINANCIALS
KEY DRIVERS
% customer 
related revenue
Fee growth 
(€ bn)
% Total revenue / 
RWAs
CIB: improvement in profitability driven by 9% fee growth year-on-year
• Solid execution of our strategy focused on fees and capital-light 
business, driving RoTE above 20%, while we maintain a leading 
position in efficiency
• Strong activity YoY mainly driven by our growth initiatives in 
Global Markets. Good performance across our footprint. Corporate 
Finance continued to gain scale in the US
• Profit up double-digits with solid performances across all business 
lines, driven by all-time high revenue, mainly fees (also record)
Recurrency performance
(€ mn, % vs. H1’24)
Fees Costs
Loans
€135bn
-2%
Deposits
€125bn
0%
CoR
0.09%
-6bps
Efficiency
43.7%
+0.4pp
Profit
€1,534mn
+15%
RoTE post-AT1
20.8%
+2.7pp
855 900 957 1,010 935 967
Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2
1.2 1.4
H1'24 H1'25
+9% 635 608 610 650 705 647
Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2
+9% +8%
81 79
H1'24 H1'25
In real terms
+5% +1.1pp 6.9 8.0
H1'24 H1'25
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H1’25 FINANCIALS
Note: data and YoY changes in constant euros.
(1) Annualized YTD net new money as a % of PB’s 2024 customer assets and liabilities (CAL). Annualized YTD net sales as a % of SAM’s 2024 AuMs. (2) Includes deposits and off-balance sheet assets. (3) Includes all fees
generated by Santander Asset Management and Insurance, even those ceded to the commercial network, which are recorded in Retail’s P&L.
Private 
Banking
Santander Asset 
Management Insurance Assets under 
management2(€ bn)
Collaboration
fees (€ bn)
Revenue including 
ceded fees3(€ bn)
KEY DRIVERS Revenue
(€ mn)
• Increased focus on value-added investment solutions and services, 
improving recurrency while maintaining high profitability
• Volumes reached new record levels, on the back of solid
commercial dynamics, both in PB (+8% customers) and SAM (+13% 
AuMs), and market performance
• Strong profit growth supported by solid revenue performance 
across businesses, reflecting our focus on fee generating activities
Wealth: strong profit growth, with revenue increases across business lines and 
collaboration fees up close to double digits
Net new money 
(PB)
Net sales
(SAM)
Gross written 
premiums
Efficiency
35.7%
-1.5pp
Profit
€948mn
+24%
RoTE post-AT1
67.3%
-7.0pp
€5.6bn
+6%
2.0 2.1
H1'24 H1'25
240 289
H1'24 H1'25
220 276
H1'24 H1'25
1,280 1,304
H1'24 H1'25
461
514
Jun-24 Jun-25
2.9
3.2
H1'24 H1'25
+2% +20% +25% +11% +8% +11%
€10.6bn
7% of volumes1
€4.9bn
4% of volumes1
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Note: data and YoY changes in constant euros. 
(*) YoY variation excluding the PagoNxt write-downs in Q2’24 of our investments related to our merchant platform in Germany and Superdigital in Latin America (€243mn, net of tax and minority interests).
(1) Transactions include merchant payments, cards and electronic A2A payments.
(2) Payments volume includes PagoNxt Total Payments Volume (TPV) in Getnet and Cards spending.
H1’25 FINANCIALS
# transactions1
(bn per month)
Cost per transaction 
(€ cents, PagoNxt)
Payments volume2
(€ bn) PagoNxt Cards
KEY DRIVERS Revenue
(€ mn)
•On track with our key strategic priorities to capture scale through 
global platforms, driving cost per transaction improvements
•Increased activity both in PagoNxt (Getnet’s TPV +15%) and 
Cards (spending +9%)
•Profit up strongly driven by double-digit revenue growth (NII and 
fees), both in PagoNxt and Cards, and by costs, improving in real 
terms even after our investments in global platforms
PagoNxt
EBITDA margin
Loans
€25bn
+18%
 Getnet TPV
€113bn
+15%
Cards Spending
€166bn
+9%
Efficiency
42.2%
-4.6pp
Profit
€335mn
+47%*
28.8%
+8.7pp
3.2 3.6
H1'24 H1'25
3.7
2.9
H1'24 H1'25
538 641
H1'24 H1'25
1,880
2,199
H1'24 H1'25
251
279
H1'24 H1'25
+19% +17% +11% -21% +11%
Payments: enhanced scale through global platforms driving strong profit and profitability
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15.1%
16.0%
H1'24 H1'25
Note: TNAVps + Cash DPS includes the €10.00 cent cash dividend per share paid in November 2024 and €11.00 cent cash per share paid in May 2025, executed as part of our shareholder remuneration policy.
Improving profitability and value creation with EPS up 19% and TNAVps + Cash DPS 
increasing 16%
Since 2021, including the full buyback we announce today, Santander will have returned €11.2bn 
to shareholders via share buybacks and repurchased around 15% of its outstanding shares
RoTE post-AT1 EPS TNAVps + Cash DPS
€ cents € per share Cash DPS: €21.00 cents
4.94
5.50
5.71
Jun-24 Jun-25
36.7
43.5
H1'24 H1'25
+0.9pp +19% +16%
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Index
H1'25 Highlights
Progress on our strategy
1
Group review
2
Final remarks
3
Appendix
4
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+4%
2,852
3,207 3,250 3,265 3,402 3,431
Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2
+1% +7%
Profit (€ mn)
2,710 3,069 3,209 3,226 3,357 3,476
Strong revenue performance supporting net operating income and profit growth
Profit (Constant € mn)
+13% Note: H1’25 ‘attributable profit' and 'underlying attributable profit’ were the same, as the ‘net capital gains and provisions’ line was zero since it includes two events that fall outside the 
ordinary course of our business, with equal value but opposite signs. For more information, see slide 53.
All references to variations in constant euros across the presentation include Argentina in current euros to mitigate distortions from a hyperinflationary economy. For further information, 
see the ‘Alternative Performance Measures’ section of the Quarterly Financial Report.
Group P&L Current Constant Current Constant
€ million H1'25 H1'24 % % % %
NII 22,716 23,457 -3 1 -1 4
Net fee income 6,684 6,477 3 9 0 6
Other income 1,610 1,116 44 48 4 6
Total revenue 31,010 31,050 -0 5 -1 4
Operating expenses -12,865 -12,913 -0 4 -1 3
Net operating income 18,145 18,137 0 5 -0 5
LLPs -6,178 -6,243 -1 6 -3 4
Other results -1,664 -2,386 -30 -28 -26 -24
Attributable profit 6,833 6,059 13 18 13 19
Group Group excl. Argentina
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31,010
29,639 +254 +103 +346 +247 +422 
-0 
H1'24 Retail Consumer CIB Wealth Payments CC H1'25
Revenue growth underpinned by customer activity across our businesses
Note: data and YoY % changes in constant euros.
YoY growth
TOTAL REVENUE
• >95% of total revenue is customer related
• Solid revenue increase YoY with all businesses growing in a more 
challenging context, which reflects the benefits of our model
• Revenue up 2% QoQ with increases in most global businesses. Of note, 
strong growth in Consumer (+2%) and Payments (+8%)
GROUP
• Retail: positive performance across most countries with strong fees
• Consumer up driven by NII, both in DCBE and DCB US, as a result of our 
focus on profitability and lower funding costs 
• CIB: record revenue again in H1’25 on the back of a strong start to the 
year in Global Markets
• Wealth up double-digits, with all business lines growing on the back of 
record AuMs and market performance
• Payments boosted by double-digit growth in NII and fees, in both 
PagoNxt and Cards, driven by activity improvement
DETAIL BY BUSINESS 
Constant € mn
14,629
15,010 14,976
15,891
15,322
15,688
Q1'24 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4 Q1'25 Q 2
+2% +2% +9% +14% +17% +5% +5%
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+2%
2.97% 2.89% 2.79% 2.92% 2.73% 2.78%
+1%
Excl. Argentina
vs. H1’24
+4%
NII up both YoY and QoQ, with solid performances across most global businesses on the 
back of effective balance sheet management
NIM
Performance
NII
NET INTEREST INCOME AND NIM
Note: NIM = NII / Average earning assets in current euros.
Data and YoY % changes in constant euros.
NIM
Quarterly
Constant € mn
2.76%
-1.13
-0.13
2.93%
+0.33
+0.76
H1'24 Asset
yields
Asset
volumes
Liability
costs
Liability
volumes
H1'25
• >80% of Group NII is from our Retail and Consumer businesses
• Excluding Argentina, NII up 4% YoY with most businesses growing:
− Retail +3%, on the back of solid balance sheet management, 
particularly in Chile, the UK, Mexico and Poland
− Consumer rose 4% with growth across our footprint supported by 
a general improvement in spreads and volumes
− CIB +13% YoY, backed by higher activity in Global Markets
− Payments +22%, driven by higher volumes across the board in Cards
• NII +2% QoQ, less affected by Argentina, with generalized growth:
− Retail up, supported by strong growth in the Americas
− Consumer (+4%) boosted by DCB Europe and LatAm
− Strong growth in CIB and Payments driven by solid activity levels
NET INTEREST INCOME
• NIM YoY trends affected by distortions from Argentina (FX and interest 
rates). Excluding Argentina, NIM down 10bps YoY in a less favourable 
interest rate environment
• NIM up 5bps QoQ in line with our strategy to improve profitability and 
capital productivity
MARGINS
Excl. Argentina
QoQ
+2% 11,425 10,991 11,106
11,894
11,219
11,497
Q1'24 Q2 Q 3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2
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Record H1 net fee income driven by value added from our global businesses
6,684 6,135 +168 
-41 
+110 +142 +187 
-17 
H1'24 Retail Consumer CIB Wealth Payments CC H1'25
• Retail:
− Strong growth on the back a more targeted product offering 
and customer increase (+7mn)
− Of note, Mexico, Argentina and the UK
• Consumer:
− Double-digit growth in DCB US (auto servicing fees). Net fee 
income affected by new insurance regulation in Germany and 
new lending trends in Europe
• CIB:
− Solid performance (+9%) across business lines supported by our 
US BBO initiative
• Wealth:
− 20% growth driven mainly by PB and SAM, in line with our focus 
on fee businesses, with solid commercial activity and positive 
market performance
• Payments:
− Double-digit growth, boosted by sound activity both in PagoNxt
(Getnet TPV up 15% YoY) and Cards (spending +9% YoY)
DETAIL BY BUSINESS
Note: data and YoY % changes in constant euros.
NET FEE INCOME
Constant € mn
YoY growth+8% -6% +9% +20% +15% +9% 3,060 3,074 3,147
3,317 3,324 3,360
Q1'24 Q 2 Q3 Q 4 Q1'25 Q 2
+9%
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8,350 8,882 8,682 9,185 8,923 9,222
Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2
6,278 6,128 6,294 6,706 6,399 6,466
CIB, WEALTH AND PAYMENTS
ONE Transformation is driving 5% net operating income growth
Efficiency
12M rolling
Costs
Net operating income
Revenue
14,629 15,010 14,976
15,891 15,322 15,688
Retail
Consumer
Retail and Consumer represent 
70% of the Group’s total costs
CIB
Wealth
CIB, Wealth and Payments 
represent 30% of the Group’s 
total costs
Efficiency
Total 
revenue
Constant € mn
Recurrency
(% fees / costs)
Note: data and YoY % changes in constant euros. Contribution to Group costs as a percentage of total operating areas, excluding the Corporate Centre. Costs in real terms are calculated 
in constant euros and excluding the impact from weighted average inflation.
GROUP RETAIL AND CONSUMER
Payments
Costs
Constant € mn
Net fee 
income
Constant € mn
Costs
Constant € mn
Constant € mn
Constant € mn
Constant € mn
+2% +2% +14% +6% +0% YoY in real terms -0% YoY in current euros 3,184
3,623
H1'24 H1'25
3,596 3,828
H1'24 H1'25
89.5% 94.6% 8,636 8,852
H1'24 H1'25
21,779 22,135
H1'24 H1'25
39.6% 40.0%
43.7% 42.8% 42.4% 41.8% 41.6% 41.8% +5%
In real terms
In real terms
-1%+3%
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Solid credit quality with improvement across most of our businesses
Note: CoR - provisions to cover losses due to impairment of loans in the last 12 months / average customer loans and advances of the last 12 months.
Data in constant euros. CoR, NPL, Coverage ratio and Stages in current euros.
CoR
12 month
LLPs
• Credit quality improvement, backed by low unemployment rates 
in most countries and easing monetary policies
• CoR down 7bps YoY, supported by most of our businesses
• NPL ratio of 2.91%, better YoY and QoQ, as we execute our NPL 
reduction strategy. NPL coverage and stages improved
CREDIT QUALITY
• In Retail, which represents c.45% of Group LLPs, CoR improved 
both YoY and QoQ to 0.89%, with good performances across our 
main countries:
− In Spain, CoR improved YoY with good underlying trends, in line 
with our active risk management to improve credit quality
− The UK’s CoR was stable YoY, at very low levels
− Brazil stable in a context of higher interest rates and inflation
− Mexico’s CoR improved both YoY and QoQ
• In Consumer, which represents c.35% of Group LLPs, CoR was
2.09%, better YoY and QoQ, mainly driven by significant 
improvements in underlying trends in the US
DETAIL BY BUSINESS
LLPs AND CREDIT QUALITY
Constant € mn
Jun-24 Mar-25 Jun-25
NPL ratio 3.02% 2.99% 2.91%
Coverage ratio 66% 66% 67%
Stage 1 €1,008bn €1,012bn €989bn
Stage 2 €94bn €87bn €85bn
Stage 3 €35bn €35bn €33bn
OTHER CREDIT QUALITY METRICS
1.20% 1.21% 1.18% 1.15% 1.14% 1.14% +6%
2,893 2,930 2,931 3,084 3,105 3,073
Q1'24 Q2 Q 3 Q4 Q1'25 Q 2
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13.0
-0.29 -0.06 -0.08
12.9
+0.54 +0.01
Mar-25 Att. Profit Capital 
distribution
Net organic 
RWAs
Regulatory & 
Models
Markets & 
others
Jun-25
Strong organic capital generation, with profitable front-book growth at 22% RoTE
CET1
%
Jun-25 or estimates
Front book pricing 
RoRWA of new book
Asset rotation and 
risk transfer activities
RWAs mobilized 
vs. credit RWAs
% RWAs with 
RoRWA > CoE
CET1 PERFORMANCE AND CAPITAL PRODUCTIVITY
MAXIMIZE CAPITAL PRODUCTIVITY
2.8% 20% 88%
1
Note: phased-in ratios are calculated in accordance with the transitory treatment of the CRR. Does not include any expected impacts from the recently announced inorganic transactions.
Our current ordinary shareholder remuneration policy is to distribute approximately 50% of Group reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), distributed approximately 
50% in cash dividend and 50% in share buybacks. Execution of the shareholder remuneration policy is subject to future corporate and regulatory decisions and approvals.
(1) Business RWA change net of risk transfer initiatives.
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    24
Value accretive capital redeployment is a top priority: ourrecent inorganic transactions 
are consistent with our strict capital hierarchy criteria
Improved our SBB target: at least €10bn in share 
buybacks for 2025 and 2026 earnings1
Accelerate the €10bn SBB execution1 using 50% of 
the proceeds of Poland disposal to early 2026
Bolt-on TSB acquisition with RoIC above 20%4,
EPS accretive from year one (c.4% in 2028)
USE OF CAPITAL PROCEEDS FROM POLAND DISPOSAL AT 3X INITIAL INVESTMENT
For more information, see notes on slide 57.
1
2 3
-50bps 13
c.-50bps
13
c.+100bps
2025 
Standalone target
Poland 
disposal
Aprox. €3.2bn 
share buyback post 
Poland
TSB 
acquisition
2025 
Pro forma CET1
CET1
%
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Index
H1'25 Highlights
Progress on our strategy
1
Group review
2
Final remarks
3
Appendix
4
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    26
Another record quarter that keeps us on track to meet our 2025 targets 
Fees
Cost base
CoR
CET11
RoTE post-AT1
TNAVps + Cash DPS
2025 targets
Mid-high single
digit growth
Down vs. 2024
in euros
c.1.15%
13% 
operating range: 12-13%
c.16.5%
Double-digit growth
through-the-cycle
Revenue c.€62bn
Note: targets market dependent. Based on macro assumptions aligned with international economic institutions. TNAVps + Cash DPS includes the €10.00 cent cash dividend per share paid in November 2024 and €11.00 
cent cash per share paid in May 2025, executed as part of our shareholder remuneration policy.
(1) CET1 ratio is phased-in, calculated in accordance with the transitory treatment of the CRR.
H1’25
Revenue and costs on track
on the back of our consistent execution 
of ONE Transformation
Solid balance sheet, with robust credit 
quality and organic capital build
Higher profitability and double-digit 
shareholder value creation driven by capital 
productivity and disciplined capital allocation
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
in constant euros, YoY
in euros, YoY
€31.0bn -0.4% +9% 1.14% 13.0% 16.0% +0.9pp +16%
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INVESTOR DAY
25 FEBRUARY 2026
LONDON
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    28
Index
H1'25 Highlights
Progress on our strategy
1
Group review
2
Final remarks
3
Appendix
4
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    29
Appendix 
2025 Investor Day targets summary
Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina
CET1 performance YTD
Detail by global business and country
Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results
Glossary and additional notes
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    30
TNAVps+DPS (Growth YoY)
(1) Our current ordinary shareholder remuneration policy is to distribute c.50% of Group reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), distributed approximately 50% in cash dividend and 50% in share 
buybacks. Execution of the shareholder remuneration policy is subject to future corporate and regulatory decisions and approvals.
(2) Those customers who meet transactional threshold in the past 90 days.
(3) Total transactions annual growth include merchant payments, cards and electronic A2A payments. Target c.+8% CAGR 2022-25.
(4) 2022-2024 ratios on a fully-loaded basis (as published in the Q4 2024 Financial Report), excluding the transitory treatment of IFRS 9 and the CRR. Jun-25 ratio on phased-in basis, calculated in accordance with the transitory 
treatment of the CRR.
(5) Green finance raised & facilitated (€bn): since 2019. Financial inclusion (# people, mn): since 2023. Targets were set in 2019 and 2021, before the publication of the European taxonomy in Q2 2023. Therefore, target 
definitions are not fully aligned with the taxonomy. For further information, see the 'Alternative performance measures' section of the Quarterly Financial Report.
ONE Transformation is driving double-digit growth in value creation
c.16.5%
post-AT1
>17% pre-AT1
Double-digit growth 
average through-the-cycle
2022 2023 2024 H1'25 2025 ID targets
RoTE post-AT1 (%) - - 15.5 16.0 -
RoTE pre-AT1 (%) 13.4 15.1 16.3 16.7 15-17%
Payout (Cash + SBB)¹ (%) 40 50 50 50 50
EPS growth (%) 23 21.5 17.9 18.5 Double-digit
Total customers (mn) 160 165 173 176 c.200
Active customers (mn)² 99 100 103 105 c.125
Simplification & 
automation
Efficiency ratio (%) 45.8 44.1 41.8 41.5 c.42
Customer activity Transactions volume per active customer (% growth)³ - 10 9 7 c.+8
CET1 (%)4 12.0 12.3 12.8 13.0 >12
RWA with RoRWA>CoE (%) 80 84 87 88 c.85
Green financed raised & facilitated (€bn) 94.5 115.3 139.4 157.2 120
Socially Responsible Investments (AuM) (€bn) 53 67.7 88.8 111.1 100
Financial inclusion (# People, mn) - 1.8 4.3 5.3 5
+6% +15% +14% +16%
Profitability
Customer centric
Sustainability5
Capital
New 2025 
targets
CET1: 13%
Operating range: 
12-13%
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    31
Appendix 
2025 Investor Day targets summary
Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina
CET1 performance YTD
Detail by global business and country
Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results
Glossary and additional notes
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Group P&L QoQ variations and excluding Argentina
Note: underlying P&L.
Fees
NII
2,929 3,030 3,152 3,143
Costs
LLPs
Revenue
2,859 2,928 3,029 2,940
Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2
14,073 14,844 14,818 15,047
10,400 10,787 10,803 10,974
+2%
Constant €mn
5,993 6,290 6,176 6,191
Group quarterly performance excluding Argentina
-3%
Q2’25 vs. Q1’25
+2%-0% +0%
P&L Current Constant Current Constant
€ million % % % %
NII -0 2 -1 2
Net fee income -2 1 -3 -0
Other income 4 7 5 8
Total revenue -0 2 -1 2
Operating expenses -2 1 -3 0
Net operating income 1 3 -0 2
LLPs -5 -1 -7 -3
Other results 38 40 34 36
Attributable profit 1 4 1 4
Group Group excl. Argentina
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    33
Appendix 
2025 Investor Day targets summary
Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina
CET1 performance YTD
Detail by global business and country
Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results
Glossary and additional notes
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    34
13.0
-0.59
-0.20 -0.14
12.8
+1.08
+0.07
Dec-24 Att. Profit Capital 
distribution
Net organic 
RWAs
Regulatory & 
Models
Markets & 
others
Jun-25
CET1 YTD performance
CET1
%
1
Note: Dec-24 ratio on a fully-loaded basis (as published in the Q4 2024 Financial Report), excluding the transitory treatment of IFRS 9 and the CRR. Jun-25 on a phased-in ratio is calculated in 
accordance with the transitory treatment of the CRR. Does not include any expected impacts from the inorganic transactions recently announced.
Our current ordinary shareholder remuneration policy is to distribute approximately 50% of Group reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), distributed approximately 50% 
in cash dividend and 50% in share buybacks. Execution of the shareholder remuneration policy is subject to future corporate and regulatory decisions and approvals.
(1) Business RWA change net of risk transfer initiatives.
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Appendix 
2025 Investor Day targets summary
Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina
CET1 performance YTD
Detail by global business and country
Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results
Glossary and additional notes
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Detail by 
global 
business
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    37
KEY DATA
Retail & Commercial Banking
Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros).
P&L
HIGHLIGHTS
Loans
€599bn
-1%
Mutual funds
€105bn
+18%
Efficiency
39.4%
+0.2pp
CoR
0.89%
-13bps
RoTE post-AT1
17.2%
+0.2pp
Deposits
€643bn
+3%
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 6,618 0.7 13,339 0.0 -4.7 
Net fee income 1,187 0.5 2,397 7.6 0.3 
Total revenue 7,816 1.2 15,710 1.6 -3.5 
Operating expenses -3,075 1.2 -6,188 2.3 -3.1 
Net operating income 4,740 1.2 9,522 1.2 -3.8 
LLPs -1,399 0.9 -2,830 -0.1 -8.3 
Attributable profit 1,785 -4.5 3,687 13.5 9.3
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
• ONE Transformation continued to deliver solid results reflected in growth 
in fees (+8%) and customer funds (+5% YoY), the improvement in 
the cost to serve (-2% YoY) and higher profitability
• Loans slightly down YoY, mainly due to our focus on active risk 
management and balance sheet optimization. Deposits and mutual funds
rose in most countries
• Strong profit increase YoY (+14%), driven by revenue performance 
across most of our footprint. By line:
− NII rose 3% excluding Argentina, supported by Chile and the UK (good 
margin management), Mexico (volumes and cost of deposits) and 
Poland (volumes)
− Fees up, mainly insurance, mutual funds and FX
− Costs declined 1% in real terms, reflecting our transformation efforts
− LLPs were flat, with solid performances in Poland and Mexico 
compensating a weaker performance mainly in Brazil, impacted by a 
more challenging macro environment
• Profit affected QoQ by higher CHF provisions in Poland. NOI up, from high 
levels in Q1’25, driven by NII
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RETAIL SPAIN
Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros).
RETAIL UK
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24
NII 1,448 -1.3 2,915 -1.0 
Net fee income 269 -7.6 560 0.1 
Total revenue 1,766 -1.5 3,560 -1.0 
Operating expenses -567 -0.7 -1,138 1.1 
Net operating income 1,200 -1.9 2,423 -2.0 
LLPs -244 -16.3 -535 -6.2 
Profit before tax 837 3.3 1,647 24.8
(*) € mn and % change.
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 1,174 -2.5 2,398 5.2 6.7 
Net fee income 2 -54.1 7 — —
Total revenue 1,149 -1.9 2,339 3.7 5.2 
Operating expenses -628 0.0 -1,266 -3.5 -2.1 
Net operating income 521 -4.0 1,072 13.7 15.3 
LLPs -44 24.4 -80 298.6 304.4 
Profit before tax 330 -3.6 678 -12.9 -11.7
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
Loans
€159bn
-2%
Deposits
€224bn
+4%
Mutual funds
€47bn
+14%
Yield on loans
3.69%
-41bps
Cost of deposits
0.51%
-16bps
Efficiency
32.0%
+0.7pp
Loans
€223bn
-2%
Deposits
€206bn
-1%
Mutual funds
€6bn
-2%
Yield on loans
4.13%
+27bps
Cost of deposits
1.93%
-23bps
Efficiency
54.1%
-4.0pp
• YoY performance in loans and deposits reflects our focus on balance
sheet optimization
• NOI +14% YoY boosted both by NII (higher yields and lower cost of 
deposits), fees and lower costs. PBT affected by LLP normalization and 
charges related to our transformation
• PBT affected QoQ by the impact of lower interest rates on NII and the 
aforementioned LLP normalization, with flat costs
• Loans reflect our focus on active risk management and balance sheet 
optimization and were affected by prepayments. Deposits up 4% YoY, 
mainly driven by demand deposits. Mutual funds rose double digits
• Strong PBT growth YoY supported by solid underlying LLP trends and 
our active risk management that improves credit quality and favoured 
by the temporary levy charged in full in Q1’24
• PBT up 3% QoQ on the back of better credit quality and cost 
reductions, which more than offset pressure on NII
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RETAIL MEXICO RETAIL BRAZIL
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 735 0.1 1,491 8.4 -8.1 
Net fee income 177 6.0 348 10.2 -6.5 
Total revenue 891 2.3 1,787 6.5 -9.6 
Operating expenses -390 1.0 -787 6.3 -9.8 
Net operating income 501 3.4 1,000 6.7 -9.5 
LLPs -150 14.7 -285 -19.2 -31.4 
Profit before tax 335 0.6 677 19.3 1.2
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
Loans
€31bn
+5%
Deposits
€35bn
+2%
Mutual funds
€14bn
+25%
Yield on loans
12.85%
-93bps
Cost of deposits
3.90%
-129bps
Efficiency
44.0%
-0.1pp
Loans
€53bn
-6%
Deposits
€55bn
+7%
Mutual funds
€20bn
+10%
Yield on loans
16.89%
+54bps
Cost of deposits
8.63%
+145bps
Efficiency
40.6%
+2.4pp
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 1,503 2.3 3,036 -0.7 -13.2 
Net fee income 333 -3.1 692 -1.8 -14.2 
Total revenue 1,779 -1.1 3,657 -2.6 -14.9 
Operating expenses -724 -0.6 -1,485 3.5 -9.6 
Net operating income 1,055 -1.4 2,172 -6.3 -18.2 
LLPs -713 3.6 -1,431 8.9 -4.9 
Profit before tax 156 -29.6 389 -40.3 -47.9
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
• Loans increased YoY across products, mainly mortgages. Deposits up 
in line with our strategy to become all our customers’ primary bank
• PBT +19% YoY boosted by a solid performance in NII (higher activity 
and lower costs of deposits), fees (mutual funds) and LLPs (underlying
credit quality and better macro)
• PBT up 1% QoQ with a strong NOI performance (+3%) on the back of 
solid fees (insurance) and cost discipline, which outweighed higher 
LLPs (single names in corporates)
• Loans down YoY (personal loans and corporates), reflecting our focus 
on active risk management and balance sheet optimization. Deposits 
rose YoY, due to time deposits. Mutual funds up double digits
• PBT affected YoY by impact of lower demand on revenue and macro 
deterioration on LLPs, with costs dropping in real terms
• Strong NII QoQ and lower cost, which is not reflected in PBT affected by 
lower GFT and the aforementioned LLP increase
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KEY DATA
Digital Consumer Bank
Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (new lending, loans and deposits in constant euros).
P&L
HIGHLIGHTS
New lending
€41bn
-10%
Loans
€211bn
+2%
Efficiency
41.5%
+0.9pp
CoR
2.09%
-8bps
RoTE post-AT1
10.4%
-1.5pp
Deposits
€130bn
+10%
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 2,747 3.6 5,504 4.6 2.6 
Net fee income 341 3.3 681 -5.7 -8.2 
Total revenue 3,191 2.4 6,425 1.6 -0.4 
Operating expenses -1,308 -0.1 -2,664 3.1 1.8 
Net operating income 1,883 4.3 3,761 0.6 -1.9 
LLPs -956 -10.4 -2,075 -2.6 -5.4 
Attributable profit 551 16.5 1,042 -0.8 -2.5
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
• Progressing in our priority to become the preferred choice of our partners 
and end customers, while being the most cost competitive player
• Loans rose 2%, driven by auto lending in Europe and LatAm, in a European 
market that is picking up after a weak start to the year
• Deposits up 10% across our footprint, in line with our deposit gathering 
strategy, supported by Openbank, and our focus on lowering funding costs 
and reducing NII volatility across the cycle
• Profit affected by the impact of lower fiscal benefits following reduced 
electric vehicle demand. PBT up 11% YoY, by line:
− NII rose across our footprint, mainly in Europe and LatAm, due to margin 
management and volumes, and the CrediScotia acquisition in Peru
− Fees fell as strong growth in US (auto servicing) didn’t offset the impact 
from insurance regulation in Germany and auto registrations in Europe
− Costs up 1% in real terms, supported by savings from our efficiency and 
transformation efforts, as we continued to invest in our platforms, 
Openbank and integrated CrediScotia in Peru
− LLPs improved, driven by an excellent performance in auto in the US
• Strong profit increase QoQ, boosted by NII (margin management), fees 
and lower LLPs, driven by good underlying trends in the US, portfolio sales 
in DCBE and DCB US and model updates in Brazil, with flat costs
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DCB Europe DCB US
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 1,129 -0.3 2,350 2.2 1.2 
Net fee income 90 14.4 175 34.1 32.8 
Total revenue 1,270 0.5 2,631 0.1 -0.9 
Operating expenses -520 -2.1 -1,094 1.2 0.2 
Net operating income 749 2.4 1,537 -0.7 -1.7 
LLPs -466 -4.0 -990 -12.9 -13.8 
Profit before tax 265 20.4 501 42.3 40.9
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
Loans
€142bn
+3%
Deposits
€84bn
+10%
Mutual funds
€5bn
+15%
Yield on loans
5.79%
+8bps
Cost of deposits
2.03%
-25bps
Efficiency
46.9%
+0.7pp
Loans
€48bn
-7%
Deposits
€46bn
+11%
Mutual funds
€4bn
+18%
Yield on loans
12.00%
+54bps
Cost of deposits
2.15%
+8bps
Efficiency
41.6%
+0.5pp
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 1,155 4.1 2,266 3.7 3.6 
Net fee income 185 -1.3 372 -17.4 -17.4 
Total revenue 1,424 1.8 2,827 -0.9 -0.9 
Operating expenses -660 -0.8 -1,326 0.6 0.5 
Net operating income 765 4.2 1,500 -2.2 -2.2 
LLPs -284 -15.2 -619 5.9 6.0 
Profit before tax 371 4.2 727 -3.7 -3.9
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
• Loans rose YoY, driven by auto. Double-digit deposit growth (mainly 
demand deposits), in line with our strategy to increase retail funding
• Strong NII performance YoY (margin management and volumes) was 
offset by lower fees (regulation in Germany and lower activity) and 
higher LLPs (macro and corporates in Germany), resulting in PBT drop
• PBT improved QoQ, on the back of higher NII, lower costs and 
reductions in LLPs driven by portfolio sales in line with our focus on 
active risk management and balance sheet optimization
• Loan performance YoY reflects our focus on capital-light business and 
profitability. Deposits up as our branch-based deposits were 
supported by strong growth in Openbank
• PBT up 42% YoY, driven by NII (auto yields and funding optimization), 
fees (auto servicing) and LLPs (resilient customer behaviour, improved 
used car prices and stable labour market), with costs under control
• Strong PBT growth QoQ, mainly due to higher fees, lower costs 
(transformation related savings) and better LLPs
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KEY DATA
Corporate & Investment Banking
Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits in constant euros).
P&L
HIGHLIGHTS
Loans
€135bn
-2%
Deposits
€125bn
0%
CoR
0.09%
-6bps
Efficiency
43.7%
+0.4pp
RoTE post-AT1
20.8%
+2.7pp
• Good progress in our strategy focused on fees and capital-light business 
through our GM and US BBO initiatives, supporting an enhanced value 
proposition and higher profitability while we maintain a leading position in 
efficiency
• Good activity levels in H1, on the back of a strong start to the year:
- Global Transaction Banking (GTB): driven by Trade & Working Capital 
Solutions, boosted by new initiatives and our expansion into new 
segments and clients
- Global Banking (GB), backed by strong growth in Corporate Finance, 
compensating weaker industry trends in Debt and Structured Finance
- Global Markets (GM): record activity in H1, on the back of a strong Q1, 
which benefitted from higher volatility
• Loans YoY affected by lower credit activity in GTB, mainly in South America. 
Deposits flat as growth in Cash Management was offset by drop in GM
• Profit grew double digits YoY, mainly driven by a solid NII performance 
(+13% excl. Argentina), fees (+9%) across business lines and gains on 
financial transactions in GM after a strong start to the year
• Compared to Q1’25, which was extraordinarily high, profit dropped in an 
environment of geopolitical uncertainty. Revenue affected by seasonality in 
GM and by lower activity in GB, and higher provisions Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 1,013 10.0 1,966 3.7 -2.4 
Net fee income 637 -8.2 1,353 8.8 5.7 
Total revenue 2,134 -0.8 4,354 8.6 4.2 
Operating expenses -950 3.4 -1,903 8.4 5.1 
Net operating income 1,183 -4.0 2,452 8.8 3.6 
LLPs -72 468.4 -85 -5.2 -8.1 
Attributable profit 728 -7.0 1,534 14.7 9.2
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
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Wealth Management & Insurance
P&L
HIGHLIGHTS
Note: Jun-25 data (AuMs); YTD data (net new money, net sales and GWPs). YoY changes in constant euros. 
(1) Annualized YTD net new money as a % of PB’s 2024 customer assets and liabilities (CAL). Annualized YTD net sales as a % of SAM’s 2024 AuMs. 
(2) Includes all fees generated by Santander Asset Management and Insurance, even those ceded to the commercial network.
KEY DATA
GWPs
AuMs
€514bn
+11%
of volumes1 of volumes1
€5.6bn
+6%
Efficiency
35.7%
-1.5pp
RoTE post-AT1
67.3%
-7.0pp
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 354 -3.4 729 -15.8 -17.1 
Net fee income 423 3.6 842 20.2 16.8 
Total revenue 1,012 1.7 2,032 13.8 10.6 
Operating expenses -354 -2.1 -726 9.0 6.1 
Net operating income 659 3.8 1,306 16.7 13.2 
LLPs -13 74.1 -21 23.3 21.5 
Attributable profit 477 3.3 948 23.5 19.3 
Contribution to profit 895 0.8 1,783 14.9 15.0
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
• We continue to build the best wealth and insurance manager in Europe 
and the Americas, leveraging our leading global private banking platform 
and our best-in-class funds and insurance product factories
• AuMs reached a new record of €514bn (+11% YoY), backed by solid 
commercial activity, both in PB and SAM, and a positive market 
performance. GWPs rose 6% YoY, with a strong performance in life savings 
business
• Profit increased double digits YoY, supported by solid revenue
performance across businesses (fees and revenue from Insurance JVs and 
from Portfolio Investments), reflecting our focus on fee generating 
activities 
• Double-digit growth in total fee contribution2 and total contribution to 
Group profit2(+11% and +15% YoY, respectively)
• Efficiency improved 1.5pp to 35.7% and RoTE was 67%
• Profit rose 3% QoQ driven by solid revenue growth, backed by higher 
volumes, net fee income across businesses and the good performance of 
our Portfolio Investments vertical, and a 2% improvement in costs
Net new money (PB)
€10.6bn
7%
Net sales (SAM)
€4.9bn
4%
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• 106 million cards managed across the Group, with solid customer 
activity (spending +9% and average balance +17%)
• Profit up 6% YoY, with NOI +23%, boosted by double-digit revenue 
growth (credit card activity) and cost control, with higher LLPs due to 
generalized volume growth, and models in Brazil and Mexico
• Strong profit growth QoQ, supported by NII and fees at record levels, 
and lower costs in most of our countries
Payments
Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes in constant euros.
20.1%
28.8%
H1'24 H1'25
Cards
• TPV up 15% and the number of transactions +7% YoY in Getnet, mainly 
driven by Mexico, Chile and Europe
• Solid revenue growth YoY (+19%) boosted by a generalized increase in 
business activity, with lower costs in Getnet offsetting investments in our 
global platforms. As a result, EBITDA margin rose to 28.8% 
• Positive profit for third consecutive quarter Getnet TPV
Spending
€113bn
+15%
Getnet number of transactions
+7%
Average balance
€23bn
+17%
€166bn
+9%
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 683 9.1 1,330 20.4 7.3 
Net fee income 469 7.5 918 11.7 3.4 
Total revenue 1,132 9.4 2,199 16.9 6.0 
Operating expenses -302 -4.0 -624 3.9 -3.0 
Net operating income 830 15.3 1,575 23.1 10.0 
LLPs -474 1.1 -960 29.1 13.8 
Attributable profit 198 67.8 319 6.2 -3.3
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
EBITDA margin
+8.7pp
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 H1'24 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 42 14.5 80 62 45.1 29.4 
Net fee income 265 11.0 510 456 21.7 11.7 
Total revenue 325 4.9 641 583 19.2 9.9 
Operating expenses -290 2.8 -576 -601 0.1 -4.2 
LLPs -5 -15.3 -11 -9 25.8 16.4 
Attributable profit 11 223.8 16 -304 — —
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
(2) H1’24 PagoNxt profit including the write-downs in Q2’24 of our investments related to our merchant 
platform in Germany and Superdigital in Latin America (€243mn net of tax and minority interests).
2
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Corporate Centre
• NII affected by lower interest rates
• Losses on financial transactions improved, due to a lower impact 
from foreign currency hedges
• Costs impacted by higher IT expenses
• LLPs increased in line with our strategy to accelerate NPL ratio 
reductions, which is improving the Group's credit quality
• The sum of the rest of the lines improved year-on-year; mainly 
due to lower tax pressure
• As a result, higher attributable loss YoY
P&L HIGHLIGHTS
Underlying P&L* H1'25 H1'24
NII -232 -100 
Gains / losses on financial transactions -143 -284 
Operating expenses -184 -174 
LLPs and other provisions -272 -82 
Tax and minority interests 93 -3 
Attributable profit -713 -609
(*) € mn.
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Detail by 
country
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    47 Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros).
SPAIN UK
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24
NII 1,806 1.5 3,585 -1.9 
Net fee income 735 -4.1 1,503 1.3 
Total revenue 3,036 -3.0 6,167 1.7 
Operating expenses -1,051 0.2 -2,099 1.7 
Net operating income 1,986 -4.6 4,067 1.7 
LLPs -295 -2.6 -599 -9.0 
Attributable profit 1,111 -3.1 2,258 28.6 
(*) € mn and % change.
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 1,244 -2.6 2,543 5.2 6.8 
Net fee income 84 3.8 166 15.1 16.8 
Total revenue 1,302 -1.3 2,642 3.5 5.0 
Operating expenses -707 -0.2 -1,427 -3.1 -1.7 
Net operating income 594 -2.7 1,215 12.4 14.1 
LLPs -60 16.3 -113 81.0 83.6 
Attributable profit 276 -1.6 560 -12.3 -11.1 
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
Loans
€232bn
-1%
Deposits
€306bn
+3%
Mutual funds
€99bn
+15%
Efficiency
34.0%
-0.0pp
CoR
0.47%
-9bps
RoTE post-AT1
25.3%
+5.7pp
Loans
€229bn
-2%
Deposits
€216bn
-2%
Mutual funds
€8bn
0%
Efficiency
54.0%
-3.7pp
CoR
0.05%
-4bps
RoTE post-AT1
8.9%
-1.4pp
• YoY loan performance reflects our focus on balance sheet optimization. 
Deposits dropped slightly in a context of lower interest rates
• Net operating income +12% YoY, on the back of strong NII (margin 
management) and fees with lower costs (transformation), not reflected 
in profit due to LLP normalization and restructuring charges
• Profit QoQ affected by the impact of lower interest rates on NII and 
the aforementioned LLP normalization, with flat costs
• Loans reflect our focus on active risk management and balance sheet 
optimization and prepayments. Deposit growth driven by demand 
deposits. Mutual funds up double digits
• Profit rose double digits YoY driven by revenue, solid underlying LLP 
trends and our active risk management that improves credit quality, 
with lower NII (interest rates) and costs growing below inflation
• Strong positive performance in NII and LLPs QoQ. Profit affected by A2A 
transfer regulatory change impact on fees and lower GFT (CIB seasonality)
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    Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). 48
PORTUGAL POLAND
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24
NII 336 -3.3 684 -18.9 
Net fee income 129 2.7 255 5.0 
Total revenue 489 -2.7 992 -13.1 
Operating expenses -134 -1.6 -269 0.7 
Net operating income 356 -3.1 723 -17.3 
LLPs -5 — 9 —
Attributable profit 247 -11.3 525 -6.7 
(*) € mn and % change.
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 736 0.2 1,480 4.8 7.0 
Net fee income 184 -1.6 373 7.9 10.1 
Total revenue 959 10.0 1,842 5.5 7.6 
Operating expenses -256 1.5 -512 7.6 9.7 
Net operating income 703 13.5 1,330 4.7 6.8 
LLPs -43 -44.1 -120 -60.3 -59.5 
Attributable profit 219 -6.4 457 15.8 18.2 
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
Loans
€40bn
+5%
Deposits
€40bn
+5%
Mutual funds
€5bn
+16%
Efficiency
27.1%
+3.7pp
CoR
0.00%
-12bps
RoTE post-AT1
31.1%
+2.6pp
Loans
€40bn
+6%
Deposits
€52bn
+10%
Mutual funds
€7bn
+21%
Efficiency
27.8%
+0.5pp
CoR
0.86%
-95bps
RoTE post-AT1
22.5%
+3.8pp
• Customer growth is driving a strong increase in loans, mainly in Retail 
and CIB. Deposits up and outstanding growth in mutual funds
• Profit increased 16% YoY, driven by an excellent NII performance 
(volumes and ALCO), fees (FX and securities) and improved LLPs, 
which more than offset higher costs (competitive labour market)
• NOI +14% QoQ driven by good NII performance (volumes) in a lower 
interest rate context and GFT (CIB). Higher CHF charges, resulting in 
lower profit
• Loans up with solid new business performance. Increases in deposits, 
mainly in demand. Mutual funds grew double digits
• Profit YoY affected by the impact of lower interest rates on NII, with 
solid fee growth (insurance), cost control and LLP releases. 
Outstanding RoTE of 31%
• In the quarter, profit down affected by declining NII, resolution fund 
contribution in April 2025 and higher LLPs
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    Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). US RoTE post-AT1 adjusted based on Group’s deployed capital calculated as contribution of RWAs at 12%, is 14.9%. 49
US MEXICO
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 1,450 4.1 2,949 5.5 4.4 
Net fee income 323 -1.7 678 27.1 25.8 
Total revenue 1,913 2.3 3,927 5.2 4.2 
Operating expenses -937 0.3 -1,944 3.2 2.2 
Net operating income 976 4.4 1,983 7.3 6.2 
LLPs -493 -0.6 -1,028 -11.3 -12.2 
Attributable profit 422 8.8 839 27.5 26.2 
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 1,109 1.1 2,238 8.9 -7.6 
Net fee income 339 -0.2 689 10.8 -6.0 
Total revenue 1,504 2.8 3,010 9.4 -7.2 
Operating expenses -617 1.2 -1,245 9.3 -7.3 
Net operating income 887 4.0 1,765 9.4 -7.2 
LLPs -302 2.3 -607 -0.8 -15.9 
Attributable profit 400 4.5 794 11.5 -5.4 
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
Loans
€106bn
-1%
Deposits
€83bn
+3%
Mutual funds
€14bn
+16%
Efficiency
49.5%
-1.0pp
CoR
1.69%
-37bps
RoTE post-AT1
11.0%
+2.3pp
Loans
€44bn
+6%
Deposits
€41bn
+4%
Mutual funds
€21bn
+22%
Efficiency
41.4%
-0.0pp
CoR
2.53%
-17bps
RoTE post-AT1
21.0%
+2.3pp
• Loans slightly down reflecting our focus on profitability and capitallight business. Deposits grew, driven by good performance in Consumer
• Profit +28% YoY, driven by revenue growth (both NII and fees) and 
better LLPs in Consumer (resilient customer behaviour, improved used 
car prices and stable labour market)
• Profit up 9% QoQ, supported by NII growth (margin management), 
lower LLPs (auto) with flat costs
• New digital features, enhanced and value-added offerings as well as 
commercial alliances continue to drive loan and deposit growth 
• Profit +11% YoY, boosted by a solid NII performance (activity and 
lower cost of deposits), fees (mutual funds) and LLPs (better credit 
quality), which more than offset our investments in transformation
• Profit up 5% QoQ, driven by revenue (NII and GFT) and cost control, 
which more than offset LLPs (single names in corporates and models)
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    Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). 50
BRAZIL
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 2,338 1.6 4,740 3.7 -9.5 
Net fee income 757 -0.3 1,549 2.3 -10.7 
Total revenue 3,085 0.0 6,309 3.4 -9.7 
Operating expenses -1,002 -1.1 -2,061 4.2 -9.0 
Net operating income 2,083 0.5 4,248 3.1 -10.0 
LLPs -1,124 0.6 -2,290 12.9 -1.4 
Attributable profit 487 -0.1 996 0.0 -12.7 
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
Loans
€89bn
-2%
Mutual funds
€51bn
+10%
Efficiency
32.7%
+0.2pp
CoR
4.71%
-6bps
RoTE post-AT1
14.2%
-0.9pp
• Loans down YoY (personal loans and corporates), reflecting our focus 
on active risk management and balance sheet optimization. Deposits 
were flat, as we optimize our funding mix, focusing on Retail
• Profit flat YoY, with higher revenue (both NII and fees), controlled costs 
(-1% in real terms) and higher LLPs (macro)
• Profit flat QoQ, with solid performance in NII (better customer margin) 
and costs (seasonality and footprint optimization)
CHILE
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹
NII 490 1.3 1,002 24.8 21.7 
Net fee income 145 1.7 297 14.7 11.8 
Total revenue 688 0.9 1,410 21.9 18.8 
Operating expenses -235 0.0 -484 6.7 4.0 
Net operating income 453 1.4 926 31.7 28.4 
LLPs -138 -6.0 -294 19.8 16.8 
Attributable profit 184 5.5 369 49.8 46.0 
(*) € mn and % change in constant euros.
(1) % change in current euros.
Loans
€39bn
+1%
Deposits
€27bn
+2%
Mutual funds
€12bn
+20%
Efficiency
34.3%
-4.9pp
CoR
1.31%
+34bps
RoTE post-AT1
19.5%
+6.5pp
• Customers up 11% YoY, driving loans and deposits increase across 
most global businesses. Mutual funds grew double digits
• Strong profit growth YoY, boosted by both NII (UF and lower cost of 
deposits) and fees (payments and mutual funds), which amply offset 
higher costs (Gravity roll-out) and LLP normalization
• Profit up QoQ, on the back of positive performance across main P&L 
lines
Deposits
€79bn
-0%
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    51 Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in current euros).
(1) The exchange rate resulting from the sale of local bonds denominated in Argentine pesos in US dollars (dual denomination peso/dollar bonds).
• In Q2 2024, given a significant divergence between the official
exchange rate and inflation, we decided to start using an alternative
exchange rate
– This exchange rate was modelled by our Economic Research Team
primarily taking into account the inflation differential of Argentina
with respect to the US
• Given the improved macroeconomic outlook in the country, from Q4
2024 we took the Dollar Contado con Liquidación (CCL)1rate as a
reference for this alternative exchange rate:
– At the end of the year, the value of this exchange rate did not significantly
differ from other market rates or the official exchange rate
• As a result, in Q3 2024 we used an FX rate of 1,618 ARS/EUR while in Q4
2024 we used 1,232 ARS/EUR, resulting in a higher quarter than previous
ones
– To give an idea of the sensitivity to the FX rate, applying September
2024 rate of 1,618 ARS/EUR, 2024 NII would have been negatively
impacted by c.€700mn, c.40% of which would have been offset in
other income, while costs would have been c.€250mn lower.
• From Q2 2025, we once again apply the official exchange rate given that
the value of the dollar CCL exchange rate does not significantly differ
from other market rates or the official exchange rate following the lifting
of currency controls and the removal of restrictions on the purchase of
foreign currency for individuals in Argentina
– In Q2 2025 we are using 1,401 ARS/EUR (FX corresponding the
official exchange rate)
• In an environment with higher activity, customers up 8% YoY, resulting
in strong volume growth across most businesses and products
• Net operating income +7% YoY, driven by fees (mainly transactional)
and lower hyperinflation adjustment, with NII affected by lower interest
rates. Profit impacted by higher LLPs (volumes and CoR normalization)
• Profit grew QoQ, backed by double-digit increases across most revenue
lines
ARGENTINE PESO
Loans
€9bn
+67%
Deposits
€11bn
+107%
Mutual funds
€6bn
+101%
Efficiency
43.5%
+2.9pp
CoR
5.09%
+29bps
RoTE post-AT1
21.8%
-16.9pp
Underlying P&L* Q2'25 Q1'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 H1'24 % H1'24
NII 523 416 25.7 939 1,423 -34.0
Net fee income 217 172 25.9 390 204 90.9 
Total revenue 641 504 27.1 1,145 1,020 12.2 
Operating expenses -275 -223 23.3 -498 -414 20.2 
Net operating income 366 281 30.2 647 606 6.8 
LLPs -133 -76 76.1 -209 -66 218.6 
Attributable profit 134 129 3.9 262 265.9 -1.4
(*) € mn and % change in current euros.
ARGENTINA
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    52
Appendix 
2025 Investor Day targets summary 
Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina
CET1 performance YTD
Detail by global business and country
Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results
Glossary and additional notes
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Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results 
EUR mn
(1) Includes exchange differences.
(2) Non-controlling interests in the statutory results column reflect all non-controlling interests, including those from Poland.
Explanation of H1’25 adjustments:
• In accordance with IFRS 5 requirements, in the statutory income statement in H1 2025, results subject to the Poland disposal have been reported under 'discontinued operations’. However, in the underlying income 
statement the results from Poland have been reclassified so that they are reported line by line and disaggregated in each of the corresponding line items.
• Additionally, regarding results that fall outside the ordinary course of our business and are therefore excluded from underlying income statement, it includes the following two events of the same value but opposite signs:
- A capital gain in Q2 2025 of €231mn from the sale of Santander’s remaining 30.5% stake in CACEIS.
- A one-off charge of €467mn in Q2 2025 (€231mn net of tax and minority interests), which strengthens the balance sheet after having updated macroeconomic parameters in Brazil’s credit provisioning models.
Explanation of H1’24 adjustments:
• In accordance with IFRS 5 requirements, in the statutory income statement in H1 2024, results subject to the Poland disposal have been reported under 'discontinued operations'. However, in the underlying income 
statement the results from Poland have been reclassified so that they are reported line by line and disaggregated in each of the corresponding line items.
• Temporary levy on revenue in Spain in Q1 2024, totalling €335mn, which was reclassified from total income to other gains (losses) and provisions.
• Provisions which strengthen the balance sheet in Brazil of €352mn in Q2 2024 (€174mn net of tax and minority interests).
Statutory 
results
Adjustments related to 
the Poland disposal
Other 
adjustments
Underlying 
results
Statutory 
results
Adjustments related to 
the Poland disposal
Other 
adjustments
Underlying 
results
Net interest income 21,211 1,505 — 22,716 22,056 1,401 — 23,457
Net fee income 6,342 342 — 6,684 6,162 315 — 6,477
Gains (losses) on financial transactions 1 1,032 37 — 1,069 931 26 — 957
Other operating income 597 (56) — 541 (114) (62) 335 159
Total income 29,182 1,828 — 31,010 29,035 1,680 335 31,050
Administrative expenses and amortizations (12,364) (501) — (12,865) (12,483) (430) — (12,913)
Net operating income 16,818 1,327 — 18,145 16,552 1,250 335 18,137
Net loan-loss provisions (6,524) (121) 467 (6,178) (6,293) (302) 352 (6,243)
Other gains (losses) and provisions (1,190) (243) (231) (1,664) (1,535) (164) (687) (2,386)
Profit before tax 9,104 963 236 10,303 8,724 784 — 9,508
Tax on profit (2,367) (237) (210) (2,814) (2,707) (209) — (2,916)
Profit from continuing operations 6,737 726 26 7,489 6,017 575 — 6,592
Net profit from discontinued operations 726 (726) — — 575 (575) — —
Consolidated profit 7,463 — 26 7,489 6,592 — — 6,592
Non-controlling interests 2
(630) — (26) (656) (533) — — (533)
Profit attributable to the parent 6,833 — — 6,833 6,059 — — 6,059
January-June 2025 January-June 2024
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    54
Appendix 
2025 Investor Day targets summary
Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina
CET1 performance YTD
Detail by global business and country
Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results
Glossary and additional notes
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Glossary - Acronyms
• A2A: account-to- account
• AM: Asset management
• AuMs: Assets under Management
• bn: Billion
• bps: Basis points
• c.: Circa
• CET1: Common equity tier 1
• CHF: Swiss franc
• CF: Corporate Finance
• CIB: Corporate & Investment Banking
• CoE: Cost of equity
• Consumer: Digital Consumer Bank
• CoR: Cost of risk
• DCB Europe: Digital Consumer Bank Europe
• DCM: Debt Capital Markets
• DPS: Dividend per share
• EPS: Earnings per share
• FX: Foreign Exchange
• FY: Full year
• GFT: Gains on financial transactions
• ID: Investor Day
• IFRS 5: International Financial Reporting 
Standard 5, on non-current assets held for 
sale and discontinued operations
• IFRS 9: International Financial Reporting 
Standard 9, regarding financial instruments
• k: Thousands
• LLPs: Loan-loss provisions
• mn: Million
• NII: Net interest income
• NIM: Net interest margin
• n.m.: Not meaningful
• NPL: Non-performing loans
• OEM: Original equipment manufacturer
• Payments: PagoNxt and Cards
• PB: Private Banking
• PBT: Profit before tax
• P&L: Profit and loss
• pp: Percentage points 
• Ps: Per share
• QoQ: Quarter-on-Quarter
• Repos: Repurchase agreements
• Retail: Retail & Commercial Banking
• RoE: Return on equity
• RoRWA: Return on risk-weighted assets
• RoTE: Return on tangible equity 
• RWA: Risk-weighted assets
• SAM: Santander Asset Management
• SBB: share buybacks
• SME: Small and Medium Enterprises
• US BBO: US Banking Build-Out
• TNAV: Tangible net asset value 
• TPV: Total Payments Volume
• YoY: Year-on-Year
• YTD: Year to date
• Wealth: Wealth Management & Insurance
• #: Number
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Glossary - Definitions
PROFITABILITY AND EFFICIENCY
• RoTE (Return on tangible equity): Profit attributable to the parent (annualized)1/ Average stockholders' equity2(excl. minority interests) - intangible assets
• RoTE (post-AT1): Profit attributable to the parent minus AT1 costs (annualized)1/ Average stockholders' equity2(excl. minority interests) - intangible assets
• RoRWA (Return on risk-weighted assets): Consolidated profit (annualized) / Average risk-weighted assets
• Efficiency: Underlying operating expenses / Underlying total income. Operating expenses defined as administrative expenses + amortizations
VOLUMES
• Loans: Gross loans and advances to customers (excl. reverse repos)
• Customer funds: Customer deposits excluding repos + marketed mutual funds
CREDIT RISK
• NPL ratio: Credit impaired customer loans and advances, guarantees and undrawn balances / Total risk. Total risk is defined as: Non-impaired and impaired customer loans and 
advances and guarantees + impaired undrawn customer balances
• NPL coverage ratio: Total allowances to cover impairment losses on customer loans and advances, guarantees and undrawn balances / Credit impaired customer loans and advances, 
guarantees and undrawn balances
• Cost of risk: Underlying allowances for loan-loss provisions over the last 12 months / Average loans and advances to customers over the last 12 months
CAPITALIZATION
• TNAV per share (Tangible net asset value per share): Tangible book value / Number of shares excluding treasury stock. Tangible book value calculated as Stockholders' equity (excl. 
minority interests) - intangible assets
Note: the averages for the RoTE, RoTE post-AT1 and RoRWA denominators are calculated using the monthly average over the period, which we believe should not differ materially from using daily balances.
The risk-weighted assets included in the denominator of the RoRWA metric are calculated in line with the criteria laid out in the CRR (Capital Requirements Regulation).
(1) Excluding the adjustment to the valuation of goodwill.
(2) Stockholders’ equity = Capital and Reserves + Accumulated other comprehensive income + Profit attributable to the parent + Dividends.
For the financial Sustainability indicators, please see ‘Alternative Performance Measures’ section of the Quarterly Financial Report.
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Additional notes
(1) As announced on 5 February 2025, the shareholder remuneration policy that the board intends to apply for the 2025 results consists of a total shareholder remuneration of approximately 50% of the Group 
reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), to be distributed in approximately equal parts between cash dividends and share buybacks.
Additionally, on the same date, the board announced its objective to allocate EUR 10 billion to shareholder remuneration in the form of share buybacks charged against 2025 and 2026 results, as well as 
anticipated capital excess. This target includes i) the buybacks that form part of the aforementioned shareholder remuneration policy, and ii) additional buybacks following the publication of the full year results, 
to distribute end-of-year CET1 excess capital.
On 5 May 2025, Santander announced its intention to distribute approximately 50% of the capital that will be released once the sale of its 49% stake in Santander Bank Polska S.A. is completed, through a share 
buyback of approximately EUR 3.2 billion in early 2026, as part of an additional buyback to distribute excess capital and, as a result, it could exceed the EUR 10 billion target. Upon announcing the agreement to 
acquire TSB Banking Group plc on 1 July 2025, the bank confirmed its goal to distribute at least EUR 10 billion in share buybacks charged against 2025 and 2026 results and excess capital.
The execution of the shareholder remuneration policy and the aforementioned share buybacks are subject to the corresponding internal and regulatory decisions and approvals.
(2) Subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals, such as that of the Polish Financial Supervision Authority (KNF).
(3) Subject to regulatory approvals and Sabadell shareholder approval. 
(4) Including intangible amortization.
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    Thank You.
Our purpose is to help people and 
businesses prosper.
Our culture is based on believing 
that everything we do should be:
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    Santander: H1'25 Earnings Overview

    • 1. H1’25 Earnings Presentation 30 July 2025
    • 2. 2 Important information Non-IFRS and alternative performance measures Banco Santander, S.A. (“Santander”) cautions that this document may contain financial information prepared according to International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and taken from our consolidated financial statements, as well as alternative performance measures (APMs) as defined in the Guidelines on Alternative Performance Measures issued by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) on 5 October 2015, and other non-IFRS measures. The APMs and non-IFRS measures were calculated with information from Grupo Santander; however, they are neither defined or detailed in the applicable financial reporting framework nor audited or reviewed by our auditors. We use the APMs and non-IFRS measures when planning, monitoring and evaluating our performance. We consider them to be useful metrics for our management and investors to compare operating performance between accounting periods. Nonetheless, the APMs and non-IFRS measures are supplemental information; their purpose is not to substitute the IFRS measures. Furthermore, companies in our industry and others may calculate or use APMs and non-IFRS measures differently, thus making them less useful for comparison purposes. APMs using environmental, social and governance labels have not been calculated in accordance with the Taxonomy Regulation or with the indicators for principal adverse impact in SFDR. For more details on APMs and non-IFRS measures, please see the 2024 Annual Report on Form 20-F filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) on 28 February 2025 (https://www.santander.com/content/dam/santander-com/en/documentos/informacion-sobre-resultados-semestrales-y-anuales-suministrada-a-la-sec/2025/sec-2024-annual-20-f-2024-en.pdf), as well as the section “Alternative performance measures” of Banco Santander, S.A. (Santander) Q2 2025 Financial Report, published on 30 July 2025 (https://www.santander.com/en/shareholders-and-investors/financial-andeconomic-information#quarterly-results). Sustainability information This document may contain, in addition to financial information, sustainability-related information, including environmental, social and governance-related metrics, statements, goals, targets, commitments and opinions. Sustainability information is not audited nor reviewed by an external auditor. Sustainability information is prepared following various external and internal frameworks, reporting guidelines and measurement, collection and verification methods and practices, which may materially differ from those applicable to financial information and are in many cases emerging and evolving. Sustainability information is based on various materiality thresholds, estimates, assumptions, judgments and underlying data derived internally and from third parties. Sustainability information is thus subject to significant measurement uncertainties may not be comparable to sustainability information of other companies or over time or across periods and its use is not meant to imply that the information is fit for any particular purpose or that it is material to us under mandatory reporting standards. The sustainability information is for informational purposes only, without any liability being accepted in connection with it except where such liability cannot be limited under overriding provisions of applicable law. Forward-looking statements Santander hereby warns that this document may contain 'forward-looking statements', as defined by the US Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements can be understood through words and expressions like 'expect', 'project', 'anticipate', 'should', 'intend', 'probability', 'risk', 'VaR', 'RoRAC', 'RoRWA', 'TNAV', 'target', 'goal', 'objective', 'estimate', 'future', 'ambition', 'aspiration', 'commitment', 'commit', 'focus', 'pledge' and similar expressions. They include (but are not limited to) statements on future business development, shareholder remuneration policy and NFI. However, risks, uncertainties and other important factors may lead to developments and results that differ materially from those anticipated, expected, projected or assumed in forward-looking statements. The important factors below (and others mentioned in this document), as well as other unknown or unpredictable factors, could affect our future development and results and could lead to outcomes materially different from what our forward-looking statements anticipate, expect, project or assume: • general economic or industry conditions (e.g., an economic downturn; higher volatility in the capital markets; inflation; deflation; changes in demographics, consumer spending, investment or saving habits; and the effects of the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East or the outbreak of public health emergencies in the global economy) in areas where we have significant operations or investments; • exposure to market risks (e.g., risks from interest rates, foreign exchange rates, equity prices and new benchmark indices); • potential losses from early loan repayment, collateral depreciation or counterparty risk; • political instability in Spain, the UK, other European countries, Latin America and the US; • changes in monetary, fiscal and immigration policies and trade tensions, including the imposition of tariffs and retaliatory responses; • legislative, regulatory or tax changes (including regulatory capital and liquidity requirements) and greater regulation prompted by financial crises;
    • 3. 3 Important information • acquisitions, integrations, divestitures and challenges arising from deviating management’s resources and attention from other strategic opportunities and operational matters; • climate-related conditions, regulations, targets and weather events; • uncertainty over the scope of actions that may be required by us, governments and other to achieve goals relating to climate, environmental and social matters, as well as the evolving nature of underlying science and potential conflicts and inconsistencies among governmental standards and regulations. Important factors affecting sustainability information may materially differ from those applicable to financial information. Sustainability information is based on various materiality thresholds, estimates, assumptions, judgments and underlying data derived internally and from third parties. Sustainability information is thus subject to significant measurement uncertainties, may not be comparable to sustainability information of other companies or over time or across periods and its inclusion is not meant to imply that the information is fit for any particular purpose or that it is material to us under mandatory reporting standards. The sustainability information is for informational purposes only, without any liability being accepted in connection with it except where such liability cannot be limited under overriding provisions of applicable law; • our own decisions and actions, including those affecting or changing our practices, operations, priorities, strategies, policies or procedures; • changes affecting our access to liquidity and funding on acceptable terms, especially due to credit spread shifts or credit rating downgrade for the entire group or core subsidiaries; • our exposure to operational losses; and • potential losses associated with cyberattacks, data breaches, data losses and other security incidents Forward looking statements are based on current expectations and future estimates about Santander’s and third-parties’ operations and businesses and address matters that are uncertain to varying degrees, including, but not limited to developing standards that may change in the future; plans, projections, expectations, targets, objectives, strategies and goals relating to environmental, social, safety and governance performance, including expectations regarding future execution of Santander’s and third parties’ energy and climate strategies, and the underlying assumptions and estimated impacts on Santander’s and third-parties’ businesses related thereto; Santander’s and third-parties’ approach, plans and expectations in relation to carbon use and targeted reductions of emissions; changes in operations or investments under existing or future environmental laws and regulations; and changes in government regulations and regulatory requirements, including those related to climate-related initiatives. Forward-looking statements are aspirational, should be regarded as indicative, preliminary and for illustrative purposes only, speak only as of the date of this document and are informed by the knowledge, information and views available on such date and are subject to change without notice. Banco Santander is not required to update or revise any forward-looking statements, regardless of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by applicable law. Past performance does not indicate future outcomes Statements about historical performance or growth rates must not be construed as suggesting that future performance, share price or earnings (including earnings per share) will necessarily be the same or higher than in a previous period. Nothing mentioned in this document should be taken as a profit and loss forecast. Not a securities offer This document and the information it contains, does not constitute an offer to sell nor the solicitation of an offer to buy any securities. Third Party Information In particular, regarding the data provided by third parties, neither Santander, nor any of its directors, managers or employees, either explicitly or implicitly, guarantees that these contents are exact, accurate, comprehensive or complete, nor are they obliged to keep them updated, nor to correct them in the case that any deficiency, error or omission were to be detected. Moreover, in reproducing these contents in by any means, Santander may introduce any changes it deems suitable, and may omit, partially or completely, any of the elements of this document, and in case of any deviation, Santander assumes no liability for any discrepancy. Sale of 49% stake in Santander Bank Polska to Erste Group All figures, including P&L, loans and advances to customers, customer funds and other metrics are presented on an underlying basis and include Santander Bank Polska, in line with previously published quarterly information, i.e. maintaining the same perimeter that existed at the time of the announcement of the sale of 49% stake in Santander Bank Polska to Erste Group (https://www.santander.com/content/dam/santandercom/en/documentos/informacion-privilegiada/2025/05/hr-2025-05-05-santander-announces-the-sale-of-49-per-cent-of-santander-polska-to-erste-group-bank-and-agrees-strategic-cooperation-across-cib-andpayments-en.pdf). For further information, see the 'Significant events in the period’ and 'Alternative performance measures' sections of Banco Santander, S.A. (Santander) Q2 2025 Financial Report, published on 30 July 2025 (https://www.santander.com/en/shareholders-and-investors/financial-and-economic-information#quarterly-results).
    • 4. 4 Index H1'25 Highlights Progress on our strategy 1 Group review 2 Final remarks 3 Appendix 4
    • 5. 5 Well ahead on all our strengthened Investor Day 2025 targets Payout RoTE post-AT1 CET1 RWAs with RoRWA > CoE Note: our current ordinary shareholder remuneration policy is to distribute approximately 50% of Group reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), distributed approximately 50% in cash dividend and 50% in share buybacks. Execution of the shareholder remuneration policy is subject to future corporate and regulatory decisions and approvals. (1) Share buyback target against 2025-26 results as well as to the expected excess capital. This share buyback target includes: i) the buybacks resulting from the application of our existing shareholder remuneration policy plus ii) additional buybacks to distribute excesses of our CET1 (including 50% of the capital released from the disposal of its 49% stake in Santander Bank Polska S.A). The execution of share buybacks is subject to future corporate and regulatory decisions and approvals. For more information, see notes 1 and 2 on slide 57. H1’25 vs. 2025 ID targets (incl. upgrades in Q4’24) STRENGTH 13% | operating range: 12-13% DISCIPLINED CAPITAL ALLOCATION c.85% SHAREHOLDER REMUNERATION Cash dividend + SBB 50% annually PROFITABILITY 50% c.16.5% At least €10bn Total SBB 2025-261 TNAVps + DPS Double-digit growth average through-the-cycle 13.0% 88% 16.0% +16%
    • 6. 6 Record H1 profit, with all global businesses contributing to our 2025 targets Q2’25 att. profit H1’25 att. profit Efficiency RoTE post-AT1 CoR CET1 TNAVps + Cash DPS Another record quarter resulting in double-digit H1 profit growth, with 8 million new customers YoY and high activity levels Strong operating performance and profitability on the back of ONE Transformation Solid balance sheet with robust credit quality and organic capital build Capital productivity and disciplined capital allocation driving profitability and double-digit shareholder value creation YoY 41.5% 1.14% 16.0% 13.0% +16% -7bps -0.1pp +0.9pp Note: YoY changes. In constant euros: Q2’25 attributable profit +13% and H1’25 attributable profit +18%. CET1 ratio on phased-in basis, i.e. in accordance with the transitory treatment of the CRR. YoY comparison based on published Jun-24 ratio (calculated on a fully-loaded basis). TNAVps + Cash DPS includes the €10.00 cent cash dividend per share paid in November 2024 and €11.00 cent cash per share paid in May 2025, executed as part of our shareholder remuneration policy. +13% €3.4bn +7% €6.8bn +0.5pp
    • 7. 7 Excellent business and commercial dynamics Strong revenue performance supporting net operating income and profit growth • Solid NII and record fees • Strong net operating income growth • CoR and RoTE improvement YoY Note: H1’25 ‘attributable profit' and 'underlying attributable profit’ were the same, as the ‘net capital gains and provisions’ line was zero since it includes two events that fall outside the ordinary course of our business, with equal value but opposite signs. For more information, see slide 53. All references to variations in constant euros across the presentation include Argentina in current euros to mitigate distortions from a hyperinflationary economy. For further information, see the ‘Alternative Performance Measures’ section of the Quarterly Financial Report. Group P&L Current Constant Current Constant € million H1'25 H1'24 % % % % NII 22,716 23,457 -3 1 -1 4 Net fee income 6,684 6,477 3 9 0 6 Other income 1,610 1,116 44 48 4 6 Total revenue 31,010 31,050 -0 5 -1 4 Operating expenses -12,865 -12,913 -0 4 -1 3 Net operating income 18,145 18,137 0 5 -0 5 LLPs -6,178 -6,243 -1 6 -3 4 Other results -1,664 -2,386 -30 -28 -26 -24 Attributable profit 6,833 6,059 13 18 13 19 Group Group excl. Argentina
    • 8. 8 Consistent execution of ONE Transformation is driving higher revenue and lower costs … • Wealth: collaboration fees with CIB and Corporates reached €2.1bn (+8% vs. H1’24) • Consumer: expansion of OEM agreements • Multi-Nationals: +3% YoY revenue growth • Product simplification: 42% fewer products vs. Jun-24 (-55% vs. Dec-22) • 66% products / services digitally available (59% Jun-24; 56% Dec-23) • US: $270mn efficiencies captured in Consumer and Commercial since 2022 • Global approach to technology: €90mn efficiencies in H1’25 (€542mn since Dec-22) - Gravity (back-end) efficiencies - Process optimization - Global vendor agreements - IT&Ops shared-services -243bps -104bps -87bps ONE Transformation Global & Network businesses1 Global Tech FY’22 capabilities & others H1’25 Note: H1’25 or latest available data. (1) As defined at the 2023 Investor Day. Efficiency execution 2022-H1’25 Reminder from Investor Day Efficiency 2022-2025 200-250bps c. 42% 100-150bps 50-75bps FY’22 2025 ID target 45.8% 41.5% 45.8%
    • 9. 9 15.7 39.4% 3.7 +2% +0.2pp +14% 6.4 41.5% 1.0 +2% +0.9pp -1% 4.4 43.7% 1.5 +9% +0.4pp +15% 2.0 35.7% 0.9 +14% -1.5pp +24% 2.8 42.2% 0.3 +17% -4.6pp +47%* 31.0 41.5% 6.8 +5% -0.1pp +18% +2.7pp 17.2% +0.2pp 10.4% -1.5pp 20.8% 16.0% +0.9pp 67.3% -7.0pp 28.8% +8.7pp … supported by solid revenue growth across our 5 global businesses Note: YoY changes in constant euros. (*) Payments YoY variation excluding the PagoNxt write-downs in Q2’24 of our investments related to our merchant platform in Germany and Superdigital in Latin America (€243mn, net of tax and minority interests). Contribution to Group revenue as a percentage of total operating areas, excluding the Corporate Centre. Global businesses’ RoTEs are adjusted based on Group’s deployed capital; targets have been adjusted for AT1 costs. GROUP CONSUMER CIB WEALTH PAYMENTS RETAIL Revenue (€ bn) Contribution to Group revenue H1’25 Efficiency Profit (€ bn) c.17% c.12% c.20% c.60% >30% c.16.5% RoTE post-AT1 PagoNxt EBITDA margin RoTE post-AT1 Profitability 2025 targets Profitability H1’25 50% 20% 14% 7% 9%
    • 10. 10 H1’25 FINANCIALS Note: data and YoY changes in constant euros. (1) Metrics cover all products and employees in the branch network in our 10 main countries. Retail: another quarter of strong YoY profit growth on the back of solid fee performance and better credit quality, as we become a digital bank with branches # of products1(k) # of non-commercial FTEs1 per mn total customers Active customers (mn) Operational leverage KEY DRIVERS (€ mn, % vs. H1’24) Revenue Costs Deposits €643bn +3% CoR 0.89% -13bps Efficiency 39.4% +0.2pp Profit €3,687mn +14% RoTE post-AT1 17.2% +0.2pp Loans €599bn -1% 3,104 2,947 3,039 3,298 3,075 3,113 Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2 77.2 80.0 Jun-24 Jun-25 +2% +2% +4% -42% 7,625 7,831 7,841 8,108 7,807 7,903 Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2 • ONE Transformation is delivering solid results as reflected in fee growth (+8%), digital sales (+16%) and higher RoTE (17.2%) • Loan performance reflecting our focus on profitability. Generalized growth in deposits, supported by stronger transactionality as we improve customer engagement • Strong profit increase driven by revenue growth (both NII and fees), cost control and enhanced credit quality In real terms -1% -14% 605 517 Jun-24 Jun-25 7.8 4.5 Jun-24 Jun-25
    • 11. 11 • We continue to enhance Openbank’s value proposition since its recent launch in the US, Mexico and Germany • Loans up, driven by auto. Strong deposit growth, both in DCBE and DCB US, is helping us to lower funding costs • Profit +16% QoQ, boosted by NII (+4%, margin management), fees (auto servicing in the US), with good underlying LLP trends in the US, model updates in Brazil and portfolio sales, while costs remained flat H1’25 FINANCIALS Note: data and YoY changes in constant euros. ANEAs: average net earning assets, including renting. Consumer: strong profit growth in the quarter and successful deposit gathering Retail deposit cost-to-serve (%) Operating expenses / ANEAs (%) Operational leverage KEY DRIVERS (€ bn) Revenue Costs Loan-to-deposit ratio (%) Optimized funding structure Total customers (mn) Loans €211bn +2% Deposits €130bn +10% Efficiency 41.5% +0.9pp Profit €1,042mn -1% RoTE post-AT1 10.4% -1.5pp CoR 2.09% -8bps +2% +3% 6.3 6.4 H1'24 H1'25 168 156 Jun-24 Jun-25 -12pp 25.0 25.9 Jun-24 Jun-25 +4% 2.6 2.7 H1'24 H1'25 +16% vs. Q1’25 In real terms +1% 0.99 0.89 H1'24 H1'25 -10% 2.48 2.44 H1'24 H1'25 -1%
    • 12. 12 Note: data and YoY changes in constant euros. H1’25 FINANCIALS KEY DRIVERS % customer related revenue Fee growth (€ bn) % Total revenue / RWAs CIB: improvement in profitability driven by 9% fee growth year-on-year • Solid execution of our strategy focused on fees and capital-light business, driving RoTE above 20%, while we maintain a leading position in efficiency • Strong activity YoY mainly driven by our growth initiatives in Global Markets. Good performance across our footprint. Corporate Finance continued to gain scale in the US • Profit up double-digits with solid performances across all business lines, driven by all-time high revenue, mainly fees (also record) Recurrency performance (€ mn, % vs. H1’24) Fees Costs Loans €135bn -2% Deposits €125bn 0% CoR 0.09% -6bps Efficiency 43.7% +0.4pp Profit €1,534mn +15% RoTE post-AT1 20.8% +2.7pp 855 900 957 1,010 935 967 Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2 1.2 1.4 H1'24 H1'25 +9% 635 608 610 650 705 647 Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2 +9% +8% 81 79 H1'24 H1'25 In real terms +5% +1.1pp 6.9 8.0 H1'24 H1'25
    • 13. 13 H1’25 FINANCIALS Note: data and YoY changes in constant euros. (1) Annualized YTD net new money as a % of PB’s 2024 customer assets and liabilities (CAL). Annualized YTD net sales as a % of SAM’s 2024 AuMs. (2) Includes deposits and off-balance sheet assets. (3) Includes all fees generated by Santander Asset Management and Insurance, even those ceded to the commercial network, which are recorded in Retail’s P&L. Private Banking Santander Asset Management Insurance Assets under management2(€ bn) Collaboration fees (€ bn) Revenue including ceded fees3(€ bn) KEY DRIVERS Revenue (€ mn) • Increased focus on value-added investment solutions and services, improving recurrency while maintaining high profitability • Volumes reached new record levels, on the back of solid commercial dynamics, both in PB (+8% customers) and SAM (+13% AuMs), and market performance • Strong profit growth supported by solid revenue performance across businesses, reflecting our focus on fee generating activities Wealth: strong profit growth, with revenue increases across business lines and collaboration fees up close to double digits Net new money (PB) Net sales (SAM) Gross written premiums Efficiency 35.7% -1.5pp Profit €948mn +24% RoTE post-AT1 67.3% -7.0pp €5.6bn +6% 2.0 2.1 H1'24 H1'25 240 289 H1'24 H1'25 220 276 H1'24 H1'25 1,280 1,304 H1'24 H1'25 461 514 Jun-24 Jun-25 2.9 3.2 H1'24 H1'25 +2% +20% +25% +11% +8% +11% €10.6bn 7% of volumes1 €4.9bn 4% of volumes1
    • 14. 14 Note: data and YoY changes in constant euros. (*) YoY variation excluding the PagoNxt write-downs in Q2’24 of our investments related to our merchant platform in Germany and Superdigital in Latin America (€243mn, net of tax and minority interests). (1) Transactions include merchant payments, cards and electronic A2A payments. (2) Payments volume includes PagoNxt Total Payments Volume (TPV) in Getnet and Cards spending. H1’25 FINANCIALS # transactions1 (bn per month) Cost per transaction (€ cents, PagoNxt) Payments volume2 (€ bn) PagoNxt Cards KEY DRIVERS Revenue (€ mn) •On track with our key strategic priorities to capture scale through global platforms, driving cost per transaction improvements •Increased activity both in PagoNxt (Getnet’s TPV +15%) and Cards (spending +9%) •Profit up strongly driven by double-digit revenue growth (NII and fees), both in PagoNxt and Cards, and by costs, improving in real terms even after our investments in global platforms PagoNxt EBITDA margin Loans €25bn +18% Getnet TPV €113bn +15% Cards Spending €166bn +9% Efficiency 42.2% -4.6pp Profit €335mn +47%* 28.8% +8.7pp 3.2 3.6 H1'24 H1'25 3.7 2.9 H1'24 H1'25 538 641 H1'24 H1'25 1,880 2,199 H1'24 H1'25 251 279 H1'24 H1'25 +19% +17% +11% -21% +11% Payments: enhanced scale through global platforms driving strong profit and profitability
    • 15. 15 15.1% 16.0% H1'24 H1'25 Note: TNAVps + Cash DPS includes the €10.00 cent cash dividend per share paid in November 2024 and €11.00 cent cash per share paid in May 2025, executed as part of our shareholder remuneration policy. Improving profitability and value creation with EPS up 19% and TNAVps + Cash DPS increasing 16% Since 2021, including the full buyback we announce today, Santander will have returned €11.2bn to shareholders via share buybacks and repurchased around 15% of its outstanding shares RoTE post-AT1 EPS TNAVps + Cash DPS € cents € per share Cash DPS: €21.00 cents 4.94 5.50 5.71 Jun-24 Jun-25 36.7 43.5 H1'24 H1'25 +0.9pp +19% +16%
    • 16. 16 Index H1'25 Highlights Progress on our strategy 1 Group review 2 Final remarks 3 Appendix 4
    • 17. 17 +4% 2,852 3,207 3,250 3,265 3,402 3,431 Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2 +1% +7% Profit (€ mn) 2,710 3,069 3,209 3,226 3,357 3,476 Strong revenue performance supporting net operating income and profit growth Profit (Constant € mn) +13% Note: H1’25 ‘attributable profit' and 'underlying attributable profit’ were the same, as the ‘net capital gains and provisions’ line was zero since it includes two events that fall outside the ordinary course of our business, with equal value but opposite signs. For more information, see slide 53. All references to variations in constant euros across the presentation include Argentina in current euros to mitigate distortions from a hyperinflationary economy. For further information, see the ‘Alternative Performance Measures’ section of the Quarterly Financial Report. Group P&L Current Constant Current Constant € million H1'25 H1'24 % % % % NII 22,716 23,457 -3 1 -1 4 Net fee income 6,684 6,477 3 9 0 6 Other income 1,610 1,116 44 48 4 6 Total revenue 31,010 31,050 -0 5 -1 4 Operating expenses -12,865 -12,913 -0 4 -1 3 Net operating income 18,145 18,137 0 5 -0 5 LLPs -6,178 -6,243 -1 6 -3 4 Other results -1,664 -2,386 -30 -28 -26 -24 Attributable profit 6,833 6,059 13 18 13 19 Group Group excl. Argentina
    • 18. 18 31,010 29,639 +254 +103 +346 +247 +422 -0 H1'24 Retail Consumer CIB Wealth Payments CC H1'25 Revenue growth underpinned by customer activity across our businesses Note: data and YoY % changes in constant euros. YoY growth TOTAL REVENUE • >95% of total revenue is customer related • Solid revenue increase YoY with all businesses growing in a more challenging context, which reflects the benefits of our model • Revenue up 2% QoQ with increases in most global businesses. Of note, strong growth in Consumer (+2%) and Payments (+8%) GROUP • Retail: positive performance across most countries with strong fees • Consumer up driven by NII, both in DCBE and DCB US, as a result of our focus on profitability and lower funding costs • CIB: record revenue again in H1’25 on the back of a strong start to the year in Global Markets • Wealth up double-digits, with all business lines growing on the back of record AuMs and market performance • Payments boosted by double-digit growth in NII and fees, in both PagoNxt and Cards, driven by activity improvement DETAIL BY BUSINESS Constant € mn 14,629 15,010 14,976 15,891 15,322 15,688 Q1'24 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4 Q1'25 Q 2 +2% +2% +9% +14% +17% +5% +5%
    • 19. 19 +2% 2.97% 2.89% 2.79% 2.92% 2.73% 2.78% +1% Excl. Argentina vs. H1’24 +4% NII up both YoY and QoQ, with solid performances across most global businesses on the back of effective balance sheet management NIM Performance NII NET INTEREST INCOME AND NIM Note: NIM = NII / Average earning assets in current euros. Data and YoY % changes in constant euros. NIM Quarterly Constant € mn 2.76% -1.13 -0.13 2.93% +0.33 +0.76 H1'24 Asset yields Asset volumes Liability costs Liability volumes H1'25 • >80% of Group NII is from our Retail and Consumer businesses • Excluding Argentina, NII up 4% YoY with most businesses growing: − Retail +3%, on the back of solid balance sheet management, particularly in Chile, the UK, Mexico and Poland − Consumer rose 4% with growth across our footprint supported by a general improvement in spreads and volumes − CIB +13% YoY, backed by higher activity in Global Markets − Payments +22%, driven by higher volumes across the board in Cards • NII +2% QoQ, less affected by Argentina, with generalized growth: − Retail up, supported by strong growth in the Americas − Consumer (+4%) boosted by DCB Europe and LatAm − Strong growth in CIB and Payments driven by solid activity levels NET INTEREST INCOME • NIM YoY trends affected by distortions from Argentina (FX and interest rates). Excluding Argentina, NIM down 10bps YoY in a less favourable interest rate environment • NIM up 5bps QoQ in line with our strategy to improve profitability and capital productivity MARGINS Excl. Argentina QoQ +2% 11,425 10,991 11,106 11,894 11,219 11,497 Q1'24 Q2 Q 3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2
    • 20. 20 Record H1 net fee income driven by value added from our global businesses 6,684 6,135 +168 -41 +110 +142 +187 -17 H1'24 Retail Consumer CIB Wealth Payments CC H1'25 • Retail: − Strong growth on the back a more targeted product offering and customer increase (+7mn) − Of note, Mexico, Argentina and the UK • Consumer: − Double-digit growth in DCB US (auto servicing fees). Net fee income affected by new insurance regulation in Germany and new lending trends in Europe • CIB: − Solid performance (+9%) across business lines supported by our US BBO initiative • Wealth: − 20% growth driven mainly by PB and SAM, in line with our focus on fee businesses, with solid commercial activity and positive market performance • Payments: − Double-digit growth, boosted by sound activity both in PagoNxt (Getnet TPV up 15% YoY) and Cards (spending +9% YoY) DETAIL BY BUSINESS Note: data and YoY % changes in constant euros. NET FEE INCOME Constant € mn YoY growth+8% -6% +9% +20% +15% +9% 3,060 3,074 3,147 3,317 3,324 3,360 Q1'24 Q 2 Q3 Q 4 Q1'25 Q 2 +9%
    • 21. 21 8,350 8,882 8,682 9,185 8,923 9,222 Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2 6,278 6,128 6,294 6,706 6,399 6,466 CIB, WEALTH AND PAYMENTS ONE Transformation is driving 5% net operating income growth Efficiency 12M rolling Costs Net operating income Revenue 14,629 15,010 14,976 15,891 15,322 15,688 Retail Consumer Retail and Consumer represent 70% of the Group’s total costs CIB Wealth CIB, Wealth and Payments represent 30% of the Group’s total costs Efficiency Total revenue Constant € mn Recurrency (% fees / costs) Note: data and YoY % changes in constant euros. Contribution to Group costs as a percentage of total operating areas, excluding the Corporate Centre. Costs in real terms are calculated in constant euros and excluding the impact from weighted average inflation. GROUP RETAIL AND CONSUMER Payments Costs Constant € mn Net fee income Constant € mn Costs Constant € mn Constant € mn Constant € mn Constant € mn +2% +2% +14% +6% +0% YoY in real terms -0% YoY in current euros 3,184 3,623 H1'24 H1'25 3,596 3,828 H1'24 H1'25 89.5% 94.6% 8,636 8,852 H1'24 H1'25 21,779 22,135 H1'24 H1'25 39.6% 40.0% 43.7% 42.8% 42.4% 41.8% 41.6% 41.8% +5% In real terms In real terms -1%+3%
    • 22. 22 Solid credit quality with improvement across most of our businesses Note: CoR - provisions to cover losses due to impairment of loans in the last 12 months / average customer loans and advances of the last 12 months. Data in constant euros. CoR, NPL, Coverage ratio and Stages in current euros. CoR 12 month LLPs • Credit quality improvement, backed by low unemployment rates in most countries and easing monetary policies • CoR down 7bps YoY, supported by most of our businesses • NPL ratio of 2.91%, better YoY and QoQ, as we execute our NPL reduction strategy. NPL coverage and stages improved CREDIT QUALITY • In Retail, which represents c.45% of Group LLPs, CoR improved both YoY and QoQ to 0.89%, with good performances across our main countries: − In Spain, CoR improved YoY with good underlying trends, in line with our active risk management to improve credit quality − The UK’s CoR was stable YoY, at very low levels − Brazil stable in a context of higher interest rates and inflation − Mexico’s CoR improved both YoY and QoQ • In Consumer, which represents c.35% of Group LLPs, CoR was 2.09%, better YoY and QoQ, mainly driven by significant improvements in underlying trends in the US DETAIL BY BUSINESS LLPs AND CREDIT QUALITY Constant € mn Jun-24 Mar-25 Jun-25 NPL ratio 3.02% 2.99% 2.91% Coverage ratio 66% 66% 67% Stage 1 €1,008bn €1,012bn €989bn Stage 2 €94bn €87bn €85bn Stage 3 €35bn €35bn €33bn OTHER CREDIT QUALITY METRICS 1.20% 1.21% 1.18% 1.15% 1.14% 1.14% +6% 2,893 2,930 2,931 3,084 3,105 3,073 Q1'24 Q2 Q 3 Q4 Q1'25 Q 2
    • 23. 23 13.0 -0.29 -0.06 -0.08 12.9 +0.54 +0.01 Mar-25 Att. Profit Capital distribution Net organic RWAs Regulatory & Models Markets & others Jun-25 Strong organic capital generation, with profitable front-book growth at 22% RoTE CET1 % Jun-25 or estimates Front book pricing RoRWA of new book Asset rotation and risk transfer activities RWAs mobilized vs. credit RWAs % RWAs with RoRWA > CoE CET1 PERFORMANCE AND CAPITAL PRODUCTIVITY MAXIMIZE CAPITAL PRODUCTIVITY 2.8% 20% 88% 1 Note: phased-in ratios are calculated in accordance with the transitory treatment of the CRR. Does not include any expected impacts from the recently announced inorganic transactions. Our current ordinary shareholder remuneration policy is to distribute approximately 50% of Group reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), distributed approximately 50% in cash dividend and 50% in share buybacks. Execution of the shareholder remuneration policy is subject to future corporate and regulatory decisions and approvals. (1) Business RWA change net of risk transfer initiatives.
    • 24. 24 Value accretive capital redeployment is a top priority: ourrecent inorganic transactions are consistent with our strict capital hierarchy criteria Improved our SBB target: at least €10bn in share buybacks for 2025 and 2026 earnings1 Accelerate the €10bn SBB execution1 using 50% of the proceeds of Poland disposal to early 2026 Bolt-on TSB acquisition with RoIC above 20%4, EPS accretive from year one (c.4% in 2028) USE OF CAPITAL PROCEEDS FROM POLAND DISPOSAL AT 3X INITIAL INVESTMENT For more information, see notes on slide 57. 1 2 3 -50bps 13 c.-50bps 13 c.+100bps 2025 Standalone target Poland disposal Aprox. €3.2bn share buyback post Poland TSB acquisition 2025 Pro forma CET1 CET1 %
    • 25. 25 Index H1'25 Highlights Progress on our strategy 1 Group review 2 Final remarks 3 Appendix 4
    • 26. 26 Another record quarter that keeps us on track to meet our 2025 targets Fees Cost base CoR CET11 RoTE post-AT1 TNAVps + Cash DPS 2025 targets Mid-high single digit growth Down vs. 2024 in euros c.1.15% 13% operating range: 12-13% c.16.5% Double-digit growth through-the-cycle Revenue c.€62bn Note: targets market dependent. Based on macro assumptions aligned with international economic institutions. TNAVps + Cash DPS includes the €10.00 cent cash dividend per share paid in November 2024 and €11.00 cent cash per share paid in May 2025, executed as part of our shareholder remuneration policy. (1) CET1 ratio is phased-in, calculated in accordance with the transitory treatment of the CRR. H1’25 Revenue and costs on track on the back of our consistent execution of ONE Transformation Solid balance sheet, with robust credit quality and organic capital build Higher profitability and double-digit shareholder value creation driven by capital productivity and disciplined capital allocation ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ in constant euros, YoY in euros, YoY €31.0bn -0.4% +9% 1.14% 13.0% 16.0% +0.9pp +16%
    • 27. 27 INVESTOR DAY 25 FEBRUARY 2026 LONDON
    • 28. 28 Index H1'25 Highlights Progress on our strategy 1 Group review 2 Final remarks 3 Appendix 4
    • 29. 29 Appendix 2025 Investor Day targets summary Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina CET1 performance YTD Detail by global business and country Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results Glossary and additional notes
    • 30. 30 TNAVps+DPS (Growth YoY) (1) Our current ordinary shareholder remuneration policy is to distribute c.50% of Group reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), distributed approximately 50% in cash dividend and 50% in share buybacks. Execution of the shareholder remuneration policy is subject to future corporate and regulatory decisions and approvals. (2) Those customers who meet transactional threshold in the past 90 days. (3) Total transactions annual growth include merchant payments, cards and electronic A2A payments. Target c.+8% CAGR 2022-25. (4) 2022-2024 ratios on a fully-loaded basis (as published in the Q4 2024 Financial Report), excluding the transitory treatment of IFRS 9 and the CRR. Jun-25 ratio on phased-in basis, calculated in accordance with the transitory treatment of the CRR. (5) Green finance raised & facilitated (€bn): since 2019. Financial inclusion (# people, mn): since 2023. Targets were set in 2019 and 2021, before the publication of the European taxonomy in Q2 2023. Therefore, target definitions are not fully aligned with the taxonomy. For further information, see the 'Alternative performance measures' section of the Quarterly Financial Report. ONE Transformation is driving double-digit growth in value creation c.16.5% post-AT1 >17% pre-AT1 Double-digit growth average through-the-cycle 2022 2023 2024 H1'25 2025 ID targets RoTE post-AT1 (%) - - 15.5 16.0 - RoTE pre-AT1 (%) 13.4 15.1 16.3 16.7 15-17% Payout (Cash + SBB)¹ (%) 40 50 50 50 50 EPS growth (%) 23 21.5 17.9 18.5 Double-digit Total customers (mn) 160 165 173 176 c.200 Active customers (mn)² 99 100 103 105 c.125 Simplification & automation Efficiency ratio (%) 45.8 44.1 41.8 41.5 c.42 Customer activity Transactions volume per active customer (% growth)³ - 10 9 7 c.+8 CET1 (%)4 12.0 12.3 12.8 13.0 >12 RWA with RoRWA>CoE (%) 80 84 87 88 c.85 Green financed raised & facilitated (€bn) 94.5 115.3 139.4 157.2 120 Socially Responsible Investments (AuM) (€bn) 53 67.7 88.8 111.1 100 Financial inclusion (# People, mn) - 1.8 4.3 5.3 5 +6% +15% +14% +16% Profitability Customer centric Sustainability5 Capital New 2025 targets CET1: 13% Operating range: 12-13%
    • 31. 31 Appendix 2025 Investor Day targets summary Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina CET1 performance YTD Detail by global business and country Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results Glossary and additional notes
    • 32. 32 Group P&L QoQ variations and excluding Argentina Note: underlying P&L. Fees NII 2,929 3,030 3,152 3,143 Costs LLPs Revenue 2,859 2,928 3,029 2,940 Q1'24 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1'25 Q2 14,073 14,844 14,818 15,047 10,400 10,787 10,803 10,974 +2% Constant €mn 5,993 6,290 6,176 6,191 Group quarterly performance excluding Argentina -3% Q2’25 vs. Q1’25 +2%-0% +0% P&L Current Constant Current Constant € million % % % % NII -0 2 -1 2 Net fee income -2 1 -3 -0 Other income 4 7 5 8 Total revenue -0 2 -1 2 Operating expenses -2 1 -3 0 Net operating income 1 3 -0 2 LLPs -5 -1 -7 -3 Other results 38 40 34 36 Attributable profit 1 4 1 4 Group Group excl. Argentina
    • 33. 33 Appendix 2025 Investor Day targets summary Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina CET1 performance YTD Detail by global business and country Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results Glossary and additional notes
    • 34. 34 13.0 -0.59 -0.20 -0.14 12.8 +1.08 +0.07 Dec-24 Att. Profit Capital distribution Net organic RWAs Regulatory & Models Markets & others Jun-25 CET1 YTD performance CET1 % 1 Note: Dec-24 ratio on a fully-loaded basis (as published in the Q4 2024 Financial Report), excluding the transitory treatment of IFRS 9 and the CRR. Jun-25 on a phased-in ratio is calculated in accordance with the transitory treatment of the CRR. Does not include any expected impacts from the inorganic transactions recently announced. Our current ordinary shareholder remuneration policy is to distribute approximately 50% of Group reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), distributed approximately 50% in cash dividend and 50% in share buybacks. Execution of the shareholder remuneration policy is subject to future corporate and regulatory decisions and approvals. (1) Business RWA change net of risk transfer initiatives.
    • 35. 35 Appendix 2025 Investor Day targets summary Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina CET1 performance YTD Detail by global business and country Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results Glossary and additional notes
    • 36. 36 Detail by global business
    • 37. 37 KEY DATA Retail & Commercial Banking Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). P&L HIGHLIGHTS Loans €599bn -1% Mutual funds €105bn +18% Efficiency 39.4% +0.2pp CoR 0.89% -13bps RoTE post-AT1 17.2% +0.2pp Deposits €643bn +3% Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 6,618 0.7 13,339 0.0 -4.7 Net fee income 1,187 0.5 2,397 7.6 0.3 Total revenue 7,816 1.2 15,710 1.6 -3.5 Operating expenses -3,075 1.2 -6,188 2.3 -3.1 Net operating income 4,740 1.2 9,522 1.2 -3.8 LLPs -1,399 0.9 -2,830 -0.1 -8.3 Attributable profit 1,785 -4.5 3,687 13.5 9.3 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. • ONE Transformation continued to deliver solid results reflected in growth in fees (+8%) and customer funds (+5% YoY), the improvement in the cost to serve (-2% YoY) and higher profitability • Loans slightly down YoY, mainly due to our focus on active risk management and balance sheet optimization. Deposits and mutual funds rose in most countries • Strong profit increase YoY (+14%), driven by revenue performance across most of our footprint. By line: − NII rose 3% excluding Argentina, supported by Chile and the UK (good margin management), Mexico (volumes and cost of deposits) and Poland (volumes) − Fees up, mainly insurance, mutual funds and FX − Costs declined 1% in real terms, reflecting our transformation efforts − LLPs were flat, with solid performances in Poland and Mexico compensating a weaker performance mainly in Brazil, impacted by a more challenging macro environment • Profit affected QoQ by higher CHF provisions in Poland. NOI up, from high levels in Q1’25, driven by NII
    • 38. 38 RETAIL SPAIN Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). RETAIL UK Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 NII 1,448 -1.3 2,915 -1.0 Net fee income 269 -7.6 560 0.1 Total revenue 1,766 -1.5 3,560 -1.0 Operating expenses -567 -0.7 -1,138 1.1 Net operating income 1,200 -1.9 2,423 -2.0 LLPs -244 -16.3 -535 -6.2 Profit before tax 837 3.3 1,647 24.8 (*) € mn and % change. Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 1,174 -2.5 2,398 5.2 6.7 Net fee income 2 -54.1 7 — — Total revenue 1,149 -1.9 2,339 3.7 5.2 Operating expenses -628 0.0 -1,266 -3.5 -2.1 Net operating income 521 -4.0 1,072 13.7 15.3 LLPs -44 24.4 -80 298.6 304.4 Profit before tax 330 -3.6 678 -12.9 -11.7 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. Loans €159bn -2% Deposits €224bn +4% Mutual funds €47bn +14% Yield on loans 3.69% -41bps Cost of deposits 0.51% -16bps Efficiency 32.0% +0.7pp Loans €223bn -2% Deposits €206bn -1% Mutual funds €6bn -2% Yield on loans 4.13% +27bps Cost of deposits 1.93% -23bps Efficiency 54.1% -4.0pp • YoY performance in loans and deposits reflects our focus on balance sheet optimization • NOI +14% YoY boosted both by NII (higher yields and lower cost of deposits), fees and lower costs. PBT affected by LLP normalization and charges related to our transformation • PBT affected QoQ by the impact of lower interest rates on NII and the aforementioned LLP normalization, with flat costs • Loans reflect our focus on active risk management and balance sheet optimization and were affected by prepayments. Deposits up 4% YoY, mainly driven by demand deposits. Mutual funds rose double digits • Strong PBT growth YoY supported by solid underlying LLP trends and our active risk management that improves credit quality and favoured by the temporary levy charged in full in Q1’24 • PBT up 3% QoQ on the back of better credit quality and cost reductions, which more than offset pressure on NII
    • 39. Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). 39 RETAIL MEXICO RETAIL BRAZIL Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 735 0.1 1,491 8.4 -8.1 Net fee income 177 6.0 348 10.2 -6.5 Total revenue 891 2.3 1,787 6.5 -9.6 Operating expenses -390 1.0 -787 6.3 -9.8 Net operating income 501 3.4 1,000 6.7 -9.5 LLPs -150 14.7 -285 -19.2 -31.4 Profit before tax 335 0.6 677 19.3 1.2 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. Loans €31bn +5% Deposits €35bn +2% Mutual funds €14bn +25% Yield on loans 12.85% -93bps Cost of deposits 3.90% -129bps Efficiency 44.0% -0.1pp Loans €53bn -6% Deposits €55bn +7% Mutual funds €20bn +10% Yield on loans 16.89% +54bps Cost of deposits 8.63% +145bps Efficiency 40.6% +2.4pp Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 1,503 2.3 3,036 -0.7 -13.2 Net fee income 333 -3.1 692 -1.8 -14.2 Total revenue 1,779 -1.1 3,657 -2.6 -14.9 Operating expenses -724 -0.6 -1,485 3.5 -9.6 Net operating income 1,055 -1.4 2,172 -6.3 -18.2 LLPs -713 3.6 -1,431 8.9 -4.9 Profit before tax 156 -29.6 389 -40.3 -47.9 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. • Loans increased YoY across products, mainly mortgages. Deposits up in line with our strategy to become all our customers’ primary bank • PBT +19% YoY boosted by a solid performance in NII (higher activity and lower costs of deposits), fees (mutual funds) and LLPs (underlying credit quality and better macro) • PBT up 1% QoQ with a strong NOI performance (+3%) on the back of solid fees (insurance) and cost discipline, which outweighed higher LLPs (single names in corporates) • Loans down YoY (personal loans and corporates), reflecting our focus on active risk management and balance sheet optimization. Deposits rose YoY, due to time deposits. Mutual funds up double digits • PBT affected YoY by impact of lower demand on revenue and macro deterioration on LLPs, with costs dropping in real terms • Strong NII QoQ and lower cost, which is not reflected in PBT affected by lower GFT and the aforementioned LLP increase
    • 40. 40 KEY DATA Digital Consumer Bank Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (new lending, loans and deposits in constant euros). P&L HIGHLIGHTS New lending €41bn -10% Loans €211bn +2% Efficiency 41.5% +0.9pp CoR 2.09% -8bps RoTE post-AT1 10.4% -1.5pp Deposits €130bn +10% Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 2,747 3.6 5,504 4.6 2.6 Net fee income 341 3.3 681 -5.7 -8.2 Total revenue 3,191 2.4 6,425 1.6 -0.4 Operating expenses -1,308 -0.1 -2,664 3.1 1.8 Net operating income 1,883 4.3 3,761 0.6 -1.9 LLPs -956 -10.4 -2,075 -2.6 -5.4 Attributable profit 551 16.5 1,042 -0.8 -2.5 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. • Progressing in our priority to become the preferred choice of our partners and end customers, while being the most cost competitive player • Loans rose 2%, driven by auto lending in Europe and LatAm, in a European market that is picking up after a weak start to the year • Deposits up 10% across our footprint, in line with our deposit gathering strategy, supported by Openbank, and our focus on lowering funding costs and reducing NII volatility across the cycle • Profit affected by the impact of lower fiscal benefits following reduced electric vehicle demand. PBT up 11% YoY, by line: − NII rose across our footprint, mainly in Europe and LatAm, due to margin management and volumes, and the CrediScotia acquisition in Peru − Fees fell as strong growth in US (auto servicing) didn’t offset the impact from insurance regulation in Germany and auto registrations in Europe − Costs up 1% in real terms, supported by savings from our efficiency and transformation efforts, as we continued to invest in our platforms, Openbank and integrated CrediScotia in Peru − LLPs improved, driven by an excellent performance in auto in the US • Strong profit increase QoQ, boosted by NII (margin management), fees and lower LLPs, driven by good underlying trends in the US, portfolio sales in DCBE and DCB US and model updates in Brazil, with flat costs
    • 41. Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). 41 DCB Europe DCB US Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 1,129 -0.3 2,350 2.2 1.2 Net fee income 90 14.4 175 34.1 32.8 Total revenue 1,270 0.5 2,631 0.1 -0.9 Operating expenses -520 -2.1 -1,094 1.2 0.2 Net operating income 749 2.4 1,537 -0.7 -1.7 LLPs -466 -4.0 -990 -12.9 -13.8 Profit before tax 265 20.4 501 42.3 40.9 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. Loans €142bn +3% Deposits €84bn +10% Mutual funds €5bn +15% Yield on loans 5.79% +8bps Cost of deposits 2.03% -25bps Efficiency 46.9% +0.7pp Loans €48bn -7% Deposits €46bn +11% Mutual funds €4bn +18% Yield on loans 12.00% +54bps Cost of deposits 2.15% +8bps Efficiency 41.6% +0.5pp Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 1,155 4.1 2,266 3.7 3.6 Net fee income 185 -1.3 372 -17.4 -17.4 Total revenue 1,424 1.8 2,827 -0.9 -0.9 Operating expenses -660 -0.8 -1,326 0.6 0.5 Net operating income 765 4.2 1,500 -2.2 -2.2 LLPs -284 -15.2 -619 5.9 6.0 Profit before tax 371 4.2 727 -3.7 -3.9 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. • Loans rose YoY, driven by auto. Double-digit deposit growth (mainly demand deposits), in line with our strategy to increase retail funding • Strong NII performance YoY (margin management and volumes) was offset by lower fees (regulation in Germany and lower activity) and higher LLPs (macro and corporates in Germany), resulting in PBT drop • PBT improved QoQ, on the back of higher NII, lower costs and reductions in LLPs driven by portfolio sales in line with our focus on active risk management and balance sheet optimization • Loan performance YoY reflects our focus on capital-light business and profitability. Deposits up as our branch-based deposits were supported by strong growth in Openbank • PBT up 42% YoY, driven by NII (auto yields and funding optimization), fees (auto servicing) and LLPs (resilient customer behaviour, improved used car prices and stable labour market), with costs under control • Strong PBT growth QoQ, mainly due to higher fees, lower costs (transformation related savings) and better LLPs
    • 42. 42 KEY DATA Corporate & Investment Banking Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits in constant euros). P&L HIGHLIGHTS Loans €135bn -2% Deposits €125bn 0% CoR 0.09% -6bps Efficiency 43.7% +0.4pp RoTE post-AT1 20.8% +2.7pp • Good progress in our strategy focused on fees and capital-light business through our GM and US BBO initiatives, supporting an enhanced value proposition and higher profitability while we maintain a leading position in efficiency • Good activity levels in H1, on the back of a strong start to the year: - Global Transaction Banking (GTB): driven by Trade & Working Capital Solutions, boosted by new initiatives and our expansion into new segments and clients - Global Banking (GB), backed by strong growth in Corporate Finance, compensating weaker industry trends in Debt and Structured Finance - Global Markets (GM): record activity in H1, on the back of a strong Q1, which benefitted from higher volatility • Loans YoY affected by lower credit activity in GTB, mainly in South America. Deposits flat as growth in Cash Management was offset by drop in GM • Profit grew double digits YoY, mainly driven by a solid NII performance (+13% excl. Argentina), fees (+9%) across business lines and gains on financial transactions in GM after a strong start to the year • Compared to Q1’25, which was extraordinarily high, profit dropped in an environment of geopolitical uncertainty. Revenue affected by seasonality in GM and by lower activity in GB, and higher provisions Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 1,013 10.0 1,966 3.7 -2.4 Net fee income 637 -8.2 1,353 8.8 5.7 Total revenue 2,134 -0.8 4,354 8.6 4.2 Operating expenses -950 3.4 -1,903 8.4 5.1 Net operating income 1,183 -4.0 2,452 8.8 3.6 LLPs -72 468.4 -85 -5.2 -8.1 Attributable profit 728 -7.0 1,534 14.7 9.2 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros.
    • 43. 43 Wealth Management & Insurance P&L HIGHLIGHTS Note: Jun-25 data (AuMs); YTD data (net new money, net sales and GWPs). YoY changes in constant euros. (1) Annualized YTD net new money as a % of PB’s 2024 customer assets and liabilities (CAL). Annualized YTD net sales as a % of SAM’s 2024 AuMs. (2) Includes all fees generated by Santander Asset Management and Insurance, even those ceded to the commercial network. KEY DATA GWPs AuMs €514bn +11% of volumes1 of volumes1 €5.6bn +6% Efficiency 35.7% -1.5pp RoTE post-AT1 67.3% -7.0pp Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 354 -3.4 729 -15.8 -17.1 Net fee income 423 3.6 842 20.2 16.8 Total revenue 1,012 1.7 2,032 13.8 10.6 Operating expenses -354 -2.1 -726 9.0 6.1 Net operating income 659 3.8 1,306 16.7 13.2 LLPs -13 74.1 -21 23.3 21.5 Attributable profit 477 3.3 948 23.5 19.3 Contribution to profit 895 0.8 1,783 14.9 15.0 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. • We continue to build the best wealth and insurance manager in Europe and the Americas, leveraging our leading global private banking platform and our best-in-class funds and insurance product factories • AuMs reached a new record of €514bn (+11% YoY), backed by solid commercial activity, both in PB and SAM, and a positive market performance. GWPs rose 6% YoY, with a strong performance in life savings business • Profit increased double digits YoY, supported by solid revenue performance across businesses (fees and revenue from Insurance JVs and from Portfolio Investments), reflecting our focus on fee generating activities • Double-digit growth in total fee contribution2 and total contribution to Group profit2(+11% and +15% YoY, respectively) • Efficiency improved 1.5pp to 35.7% and RoTE was 67% • Profit rose 3% QoQ driven by solid revenue growth, backed by higher volumes, net fee income across businesses and the good performance of our Portfolio Investments vertical, and a 2% improvement in costs Net new money (PB) €10.6bn 7% Net sales (SAM) €4.9bn 4%
    • 44. 44 • 106 million cards managed across the Group, with solid customer activity (spending +9% and average balance +17%) • Profit up 6% YoY, with NOI +23%, boosted by double-digit revenue growth (credit card activity) and cost control, with higher LLPs due to generalized volume growth, and models in Brazil and Mexico • Strong profit growth QoQ, supported by NII and fees at record levels, and lower costs in most of our countries Payments Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes in constant euros. 20.1% 28.8% H1'24 H1'25 Cards • TPV up 15% and the number of transactions +7% YoY in Getnet, mainly driven by Mexico, Chile and Europe • Solid revenue growth YoY (+19%) boosted by a generalized increase in business activity, with lower costs in Getnet offsetting investments in our global platforms. As a result, EBITDA margin rose to 28.8% • Positive profit for third consecutive quarter Getnet TPV Spending €113bn +15% Getnet number of transactions +7% Average balance €23bn +17% €166bn +9% Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 683 9.1 1,330 20.4 7.3 Net fee income 469 7.5 918 11.7 3.4 Total revenue 1,132 9.4 2,199 16.9 6.0 Operating expenses -302 -4.0 -624 3.9 -3.0 Net operating income 830 15.3 1,575 23.1 10.0 LLPs -474 1.1 -960 29.1 13.8 Attributable profit 198 67.8 319 6.2 -3.3 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. EBITDA margin +8.7pp Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 H1'24 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 42 14.5 80 62 45.1 29.4 Net fee income 265 11.0 510 456 21.7 11.7 Total revenue 325 4.9 641 583 19.2 9.9 Operating expenses -290 2.8 -576 -601 0.1 -4.2 LLPs -5 -15.3 -11 -9 25.8 16.4 Attributable profit 11 223.8 16 -304 — — (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. (2) H1’24 PagoNxt profit including the write-downs in Q2’24 of our investments related to our merchant platform in Germany and Superdigital in Latin America (€243mn net of tax and minority interests). 2
    • 45. 45 Corporate Centre • NII affected by lower interest rates • Losses on financial transactions improved, due to a lower impact from foreign currency hedges • Costs impacted by higher IT expenses • LLPs increased in line with our strategy to accelerate NPL ratio reductions, which is improving the Group's credit quality • The sum of the rest of the lines improved year-on-year; mainly due to lower tax pressure • As a result, higher attributable loss YoY P&L HIGHLIGHTS Underlying P&L* H1'25 H1'24 NII -232 -100 Gains / losses on financial transactions -143 -284 Operating expenses -184 -174 LLPs and other provisions -272 -82 Tax and minority interests 93 -3 Attributable profit -713 -609 (*) € mn.
    • 46. 46 Detail by country
    • 47. 47 Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). SPAIN UK Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 NII 1,806 1.5 3,585 -1.9 Net fee income 735 -4.1 1,503 1.3 Total revenue 3,036 -3.0 6,167 1.7 Operating expenses -1,051 0.2 -2,099 1.7 Net operating income 1,986 -4.6 4,067 1.7 LLPs -295 -2.6 -599 -9.0 Attributable profit 1,111 -3.1 2,258 28.6 (*) € mn and % change. Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 1,244 -2.6 2,543 5.2 6.8 Net fee income 84 3.8 166 15.1 16.8 Total revenue 1,302 -1.3 2,642 3.5 5.0 Operating expenses -707 -0.2 -1,427 -3.1 -1.7 Net operating income 594 -2.7 1,215 12.4 14.1 LLPs -60 16.3 -113 81.0 83.6 Attributable profit 276 -1.6 560 -12.3 -11.1 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. Loans €232bn -1% Deposits €306bn +3% Mutual funds €99bn +15% Efficiency 34.0% -0.0pp CoR 0.47% -9bps RoTE post-AT1 25.3% +5.7pp Loans €229bn -2% Deposits €216bn -2% Mutual funds €8bn 0% Efficiency 54.0% -3.7pp CoR 0.05% -4bps RoTE post-AT1 8.9% -1.4pp • YoY loan performance reflects our focus on balance sheet optimization. Deposits dropped slightly in a context of lower interest rates • Net operating income +12% YoY, on the back of strong NII (margin management) and fees with lower costs (transformation), not reflected in profit due to LLP normalization and restructuring charges • Profit QoQ affected by the impact of lower interest rates on NII and the aforementioned LLP normalization, with flat costs • Loans reflect our focus on active risk management and balance sheet optimization and prepayments. Deposit growth driven by demand deposits. Mutual funds up double digits • Profit rose double digits YoY driven by revenue, solid underlying LLP trends and our active risk management that improves credit quality, with lower NII (interest rates) and costs growing below inflation • Strong positive performance in NII and LLPs QoQ. Profit affected by A2A transfer regulatory change impact on fees and lower GFT (CIB seasonality)
    • 48. Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). 48 PORTUGAL POLAND Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 NII 336 -3.3 684 -18.9 Net fee income 129 2.7 255 5.0 Total revenue 489 -2.7 992 -13.1 Operating expenses -134 -1.6 -269 0.7 Net operating income 356 -3.1 723 -17.3 LLPs -5 — 9 — Attributable profit 247 -11.3 525 -6.7 (*) € mn and % change. Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 736 0.2 1,480 4.8 7.0 Net fee income 184 -1.6 373 7.9 10.1 Total revenue 959 10.0 1,842 5.5 7.6 Operating expenses -256 1.5 -512 7.6 9.7 Net operating income 703 13.5 1,330 4.7 6.8 LLPs -43 -44.1 -120 -60.3 -59.5 Attributable profit 219 -6.4 457 15.8 18.2 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. Loans €40bn +5% Deposits €40bn +5% Mutual funds €5bn +16% Efficiency 27.1% +3.7pp CoR 0.00% -12bps RoTE post-AT1 31.1% +2.6pp Loans €40bn +6% Deposits €52bn +10% Mutual funds €7bn +21% Efficiency 27.8% +0.5pp CoR 0.86% -95bps RoTE post-AT1 22.5% +3.8pp • Customer growth is driving a strong increase in loans, mainly in Retail and CIB. Deposits up and outstanding growth in mutual funds • Profit increased 16% YoY, driven by an excellent NII performance (volumes and ALCO), fees (FX and securities) and improved LLPs, which more than offset higher costs (competitive labour market) • NOI +14% QoQ driven by good NII performance (volumes) in a lower interest rate context and GFT (CIB). Higher CHF charges, resulting in lower profit • Loans up with solid new business performance. Increases in deposits, mainly in demand. Mutual funds grew double digits • Profit YoY affected by the impact of lower interest rates on NII, with solid fee growth (insurance), cost control and LLP releases. Outstanding RoTE of 31% • In the quarter, profit down affected by declining NII, resolution fund contribution in April 2025 and higher LLPs
    • 49. Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). US RoTE post-AT1 adjusted based on Group’s deployed capital calculated as contribution of RWAs at 12%, is 14.9%. 49 US MEXICO Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 1,450 4.1 2,949 5.5 4.4 Net fee income 323 -1.7 678 27.1 25.8 Total revenue 1,913 2.3 3,927 5.2 4.2 Operating expenses -937 0.3 -1,944 3.2 2.2 Net operating income 976 4.4 1,983 7.3 6.2 LLPs -493 -0.6 -1,028 -11.3 -12.2 Attributable profit 422 8.8 839 27.5 26.2 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 1,109 1.1 2,238 8.9 -7.6 Net fee income 339 -0.2 689 10.8 -6.0 Total revenue 1,504 2.8 3,010 9.4 -7.2 Operating expenses -617 1.2 -1,245 9.3 -7.3 Net operating income 887 4.0 1,765 9.4 -7.2 LLPs -302 2.3 -607 -0.8 -15.9 Attributable profit 400 4.5 794 11.5 -5.4 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. Loans €106bn -1% Deposits €83bn +3% Mutual funds €14bn +16% Efficiency 49.5% -1.0pp CoR 1.69% -37bps RoTE post-AT1 11.0% +2.3pp Loans €44bn +6% Deposits €41bn +4% Mutual funds €21bn +22% Efficiency 41.4% -0.0pp CoR 2.53% -17bps RoTE post-AT1 21.0% +2.3pp • Loans slightly down reflecting our focus on profitability and capitallight business. Deposits grew, driven by good performance in Consumer • Profit +28% YoY, driven by revenue growth (both NII and fees) and better LLPs in Consumer (resilient customer behaviour, improved used car prices and stable labour market) • Profit up 9% QoQ, supported by NII growth (margin management), lower LLPs (auto) with flat costs • New digital features, enhanced and value-added offerings as well as commercial alliances continue to drive loan and deposit growth • Profit +11% YoY, boosted by a solid NII performance (activity and lower cost of deposits), fees (mutual funds) and LLPs (better credit quality), which more than offset our investments in transformation • Profit up 5% QoQ, driven by revenue (NII and GFT) and cost control, which more than offset LLPs (single names in corporates and models)
    • 50. Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in constant euros). 50 BRAZIL Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 2,338 1.6 4,740 3.7 -9.5 Net fee income 757 -0.3 1,549 2.3 -10.7 Total revenue 3,085 0.0 6,309 3.4 -9.7 Operating expenses -1,002 -1.1 -2,061 4.2 -9.0 Net operating income 2,083 0.5 4,248 3.1 -10.0 LLPs -1,124 0.6 -2,290 12.9 -1.4 Attributable profit 487 -0.1 996 0.0 -12.7 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. Loans €89bn -2% Mutual funds €51bn +10% Efficiency 32.7% +0.2pp CoR 4.71% -6bps RoTE post-AT1 14.2% -0.9pp • Loans down YoY (personal loans and corporates), reflecting our focus on active risk management and balance sheet optimization. Deposits were flat, as we optimize our funding mix, focusing on Retail • Profit flat YoY, with higher revenue (both NII and fees), controlled costs (-1% in real terms) and higher LLPs (macro) • Profit flat QoQ, with solid performance in NII (better customer margin) and costs (seasonality and footprint optimization) CHILE Underlying P&L* Q2'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 % H1'24 % H1'24¹ NII 490 1.3 1,002 24.8 21.7 Net fee income 145 1.7 297 14.7 11.8 Total revenue 688 0.9 1,410 21.9 18.8 Operating expenses -235 0.0 -484 6.7 4.0 Net operating income 453 1.4 926 31.7 28.4 LLPs -138 -6.0 -294 19.8 16.8 Attributable profit 184 5.5 369 49.8 46.0 (*) € mn and % change in constant euros. (1) % change in current euros. Loans €39bn +1% Deposits €27bn +2% Mutual funds €12bn +20% Efficiency 34.3% -4.9pp CoR 1.31% +34bps RoTE post-AT1 19.5% +6.5pp • Customers up 11% YoY, driving loans and deposits increase across most global businesses. Mutual funds grew double digits • Strong profit growth YoY, boosted by both NII (UF and lower cost of deposits) and fees (payments and mutual funds), which amply offset higher costs (Gravity roll-out) and LLP normalization • Profit up QoQ, on the back of positive performance across main P&L lines Deposits €79bn -0%
    • 51. 51 Note: Jun-25 data and YoY changes (loans, deposits and mutual funds in current euros). (1) The exchange rate resulting from the sale of local bonds denominated in Argentine pesos in US dollars (dual denomination peso/dollar bonds). • In Q2 2024, given a significant divergence between the official exchange rate and inflation, we decided to start using an alternative exchange rate – This exchange rate was modelled by our Economic Research Team primarily taking into account the inflation differential of Argentina with respect to the US • Given the improved macroeconomic outlook in the country, from Q4 2024 we took the Dollar Contado con Liquidación (CCL)1rate as a reference for this alternative exchange rate: – At the end of the year, the value of this exchange rate did not significantly differ from other market rates or the official exchange rate • As a result, in Q3 2024 we used an FX rate of 1,618 ARS/EUR while in Q4 2024 we used 1,232 ARS/EUR, resulting in a higher quarter than previous ones – To give an idea of the sensitivity to the FX rate, applying September 2024 rate of 1,618 ARS/EUR, 2024 NII would have been negatively impacted by c.€700mn, c.40% of which would have been offset in other income, while costs would have been c.€250mn lower. • From Q2 2025, we once again apply the official exchange rate given that the value of the dollar CCL exchange rate does not significantly differ from other market rates or the official exchange rate following the lifting of currency controls and the removal of restrictions on the purchase of foreign currency for individuals in Argentina – In Q2 2025 we are using 1,401 ARS/EUR (FX corresponding the official exchange rate) • In an environment with higher activity, customers up 8% YoY, resulting in strong volume growth across most businesses and products • Net operating income +7% YoY, driven by fees (mainly transactional) and lower hyperinflation adjustment, with NII affected by lower interest rates. Profit impacted by higher LLPs (volumes and CoR normalization) • Profit grew QoQ, backed by double-digit increases across most revenue lines ARGENTINE PESO Loans €9bn +67% Deposits €11bn +107% Mutual funds €6bn +101% Efficiency 43.5% +2.9pp CoR 5.09% +29bps RoTE post-AT1 21.8% -16.9pp Underlying P&L* Q2'25 Q1'25 % Q1'25 H1'25 H1'24 % H1'24 NII 523 416 25.7 939 1,423 -34.0 Net fee income 217 172 25.9 390 204 90.9 Total revenue 641 504 27.1 1,145 1,020 12.2 Operating expenses -275 -223 23.3 -498 -414 20.2 Net operating income 366 281 30.2 647 606 6.8 LLPs -133 -76 76.1 -209 -66 218.6 Attributable profit 134 129 3.9 262 265.9 -1.4 (*) € mn and % change in current euros. ARGENTINA
    • 52. 52 Appendix 2025 Investor Day targets summary Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina CET1 performance YTD Detail by global business and country Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results Glossary and additional notes
    • 53. 53 Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results EUR mn (1) Includes exchange differences. (2) Non-controlling interests in the statutory results column reflect all non-controlling interests, including those from Poland. Explanation of H1’25 adjustments: • In accordance with IFRS 5 requirements, in the statutory income statement in H1 2025, results subject to the Poland disposal have been reported under 'discontinued operations’. However, in the underlying income statement the results from Poland have been reclassified so that they are reported line by line and disaggregated in each of the corresponding line items. • Additionally, regarding results that fall outside the ordinary course of our business and are therefore excluded from underlying income statement, it includes the following two events of the same value but opposite signs: - A capital gain in Q2 2025 of €231mn from the sale of Santander’s remaining 30.5% stake in CACEIS. - A one-off charge of €467mn in Q2 2025 (€231mn net of tax and minority interests), which strengthens the balance sheet after having updated macroeconomic parameters in Brazil’s credit provisioning models. Explanation of H1’24 adjustments: • In accordance with IFRS 5 requirements, in the statutory income statement in H1 2024, results subject to the Poland disposal have been reported under 'discontinued operations'. However, in the underlying income statement the results from Poland have been reclassified so that they are reported line by line and disaggregated in each of the corresponding line items. • Temporary levy on revenue in Spain in Q1 2024, totalling €335mn, which was reclassified from total income to other gains (losses) and provisions. • Provisions which strengthen the balance sheet in Brazil of €352mn in Q2 2024 (€174mn net of tax and minority interests). Statutory results Adjustments related to the Poland disposal Other adjustments Underlying results Statutory results Adjustments related to the Poland disposal Other adjustments Underlying results Net interest income 21,211 1,505 — 22,716 22,056 1,401 — 23,457 Net fee income 6,342 342 — 6,684 6,162 315 — 6,477 Gains (losses) on financial transactions 1 1,032 37 — 1,069 931 26 — 957 Other operating income 597 (56) — 541 (114) (62) 335 159 Total income 29,182 1,828 — 31,010 29,035 1,680 335 31,050 Administrative expenses and amortizations (12,364) (501) — (12,865) (12,483) (430) — (12,913) Net operating income 16,818 1,327 — 18,145 16,552 1,250 335 18,137 Net loan-loss provisions (6,524) (121) 467 (6,178) (6,293) (302) 352 (6,243) Other gains (losses) and provisions (1,190) (243) (231) (1,664) (1,535) (164) (687) (2,386) Profit before tax 9,104 963 236 10,303 8,724 784 — 9,508 Tax on profit (2,367) (237) (210) (2,814) (2,707) (209) — (2,916) Profit from continuing operations 6,737 726 26 7,489 6,017 575 — 6,592 Net profit from discontinued operations 726 (726) — — 575 (575) — — Consolidated profit 7,463 — 26 7,489 6,592 — — 6,592 Non-controlling interests 2 (630) — (26) (656) (533) — — (533) Profit attributable to the parent 6,833 — — 6,833 6,059 — — 6,059 January-June 2025 January-June 2024
    • 54. 54 Appendix 2025 Investor Day targets summary Group P&L QoQ and excluding Argentina CET1 performance YTD Detail by global business and country Reconciliation of underlying results to statutory results Glossary and additional notes
    • 55. 55 Glossary - Acronyms • A2A: account-to- account • AM: Asset management • AuMs: Assets under Management • bn: Billion • bps: Basis points • c.: Circa • CET1: Common equity tier 1 • CHF: Swiss franc • CF: Corporate Finance • CIB: Corporate & Investment Banking • CoE: Cost of equity • Consumer: Digital Consumer Bank • CoR: Cost of risk • DCB Europe: Digital Consumer Bank Europe • DCM: Debt Capital Markets • DPS: Dividend per share • EPS: Earnings per share • FX: Foreign Exchange • FY: Full year • GFT: Gains on financial transactions • ID: Investor Day • IFRS 5: International Financial Reporting Standard 5, on non-current assets held for sale and discontinued operations • IFRS 9: International Financial Reporting Standard 9, regarding financial instruments • k: Thousands • LLPs: Loan-loss provisions • mn: Million • NII: Net interest income • NIM: Net interest margin • n.m.: Not meaningful • NPL: Non-performing loans • OEM: Original equipment manufacturer • Payments: PagoNxt and Cards • PB: Private Banking • PBT: Profit before tax • P&L: Profit and loss • pp: Percentage points • Ps: Per share • QoQ: Quarter-on-Quarter • Repos: Repurchase agreements • Retail: Retail & Commercial Banking • RoE: Return on equity • RoRWA: Return on risk-weighted assets • RoTE: Return on tangible equity • RWA: Risk-weighted assets • SAM: Santander Asset Management • SBB: share buybacks • SME: Small and Medium Enterprises • US BBO: US Banking Build-Out • TNAV: Tangible net asset value • TPV: Total Payments Volume • YoY: Year-on-Year • YTD: Year to date • Wealth: Wealth Management & Insurance • #: Number
    • 56. 56 Glossary - Definitions PROFITABILITY AND EFFICIENCY • RoTE (Return on tangible equity): Profit attributable to the parent (annualized)1/ Average stockholders' equity2(excl. minority interests) - intangible assets • RoTE (post-AT1): Profit attributable to the parent minus AT1 costs (annualized)1/ Average stockholders' equity2(excl. minority interests) - intangible assets • RoRWA (Return on risk-weighted assets): Consolidated profit (annualized) / Average risk-weighted assets • Efficiency: Underlying operating expenses / Underlying total income. Operating expenses defined as administrative expenses + amortizations VOLUMES • Loans: Gross loans and advances to customers (excl. reverse repos) • Customer funds: Customer deposits excluding repos + marketed mutual funds CREDIT RISK • NPL ratio: Credit impaired customer loans and advances, guarantees and undrawn balances / Total risk. Total risk is defined as: Non-impaired and impaired customer loans and advances and guarantees + impaired undrawn customer balances • NPL coverage ratio: Total allowances to cover impairment losses on customer loans and advances, guarantees and undrawn balances / Credit impaired customer loans and advances, guarantees and undrawn balances • Cost of risk: Underlying allowances for loan-loss provisions over the last 12 months / Average loans and advances to customers over the last 12 months CAPITALIZATION • TNAV per share (Tangible net asset value per share): Tangible book value / Number of shares excluding treasury stock. Tangible book value calculated as Stockholders' equity (excl. minority interests) - intangible assets Note: the averages for the RoTE, RoTE post-AT1 and RoRWA denominators are calculated using the monthly average over the period, which we believe should not differ materially from using daily balances. The risk-weighted assets included in the denominator of the RoRWA metric are calculated in line with the criteria laid out in the CRR (Capital Requirements Regulation). (1) Excluding the adjustment to the valuation of goodwill. (2) Stockholders’ equity = Capital and Reserves + Accumulated other comprehensive income + Profit attributable to the parent + Dividends. For the financial Sustainability indicators, please see ‘Alternative Performance Measures’ section of the Quarterly Financial Report.
    • 57. 57 Additional notes (1) As announced on 5 February 2025, the shareholder remuneration policy that the board intends to apply for the 2025 results consists of a total shareholder remuneration of approximately 50% of the Group reported profit (excluding non-cash, non-capital ratios impact items), to be distributed in approximately equal parts between cash dividends and share buybacks. Additionally, on the same date, the board announced its objective to allocate EUR 10 billion to shareholder remuneration in the form of share buybacks charged against 2025 and 2026 results, as well as anticipated capital excess. This target includes i) the buybacks that form part of the aforementioned shareholder remuneration policy, and ii) additional buybacks following the publication of the full year results, to distribute end-of-year CET1 excess capital. On 5 May 2025, Santander announced its intention to distribute approximately 50% of the capital that will be released once the sale of its 49% stake in Santander Bank Polska S.A. is completed, through a share buyback of approximately EUR 3.2 billion in early 2026, as part of an additional buyback to distribute excess capital and, as a result, it could exceed the EUR 10 billion target. Upon announcing the agreement to acquire TSB Banking Group plc on 1 July 2025, the bank confirmed its goal to distribute at least EUR 10 billion in share buybacks charged against 2025 and 2026 results and excess capital. The execution of the shareholder remuneration policy and the aforementioned share buybacks are subject to the corresponding internal and regulatory decisions and approvals. (2) Subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals, such as that of the Polish Financial Supervision Authority (KNF). (3) Subject to regulatory approvals and Sabadell shareholder approval. (4) Including intangible amortization.
    • 58. Thank You. Our purpose is to help people and businesses prosper. Our culture is based on believing that everything we do should be:


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