The small German newspaper nd will stop printing weekday editions from this month moving its daily journalism online while keeping a weekly paper, a move that underlines the economic strain on print and the growing urgency of digital transition among European publishers.

In the wake of Die Tagezeitung’s (taz) decision to end weekday printing last October, nd is embarking on a comparable but distinct transition that its management describes as necessary for survival and renewal. From April 1 the daily digital edition, nd.DerTag, will be published exclusively online, while the weekly paper, nd.DieWoche, will continue to appear in print each Friday, the publisher’s cooperative said.

The move follows earlier adjustments. From May 2025 nd reduced its printing schedule to Tuesday through Thursday while all six weekday editions were made available digitally. According to the publisher, the latest change reflects shifting reader behaviour and mounting economic pressure.

Those pressures are widespread across the German press. Industry data show newspaper print runs fell by 8% in 2025, while publishers cite higher and volatile costs for printing and distribution. Taz framed its own move in October as the culmination of a multi-year digital shift and a response to rising production and delivery costs.
nd’s executive team said the new model followed months of internal redesign, including a reworked digital product, a new subscription structure and revised production routines.

“Our employees have implemented these changes under tight personnel and budget constraints,” said Rouzbeh Taheri, chief executive of the nd cooperative, saying reader support had been critical to the paper’s viability. He added that the cooperative ownership model helps preserve editorial independence compared with corporate-owned rivals.

The publisher said existing full subscribers will be migrated to a combined offer — weekday digital access and the Friday print edition — at a reduced price. The nd.Digital app is designed to run across a wide range of devices, with the web edition available for older systems.

Editorially, nd casts the shift as both defensive and forward-looking, a response to economic pressure and an attempt to innovate in a market increasingly dominated by a small number of media groups. The cooperative said it will maintain its journalistic standards and timely reporting as it redirects resources towards digital.

Source: Noah Wire Services

Noah Fact Check Pro

The draft above was created using the information available at the time the story first
emerged. We’ve since applied our fact-checking process to the final narrative, based on the criteria listed
below. The results are intended to help you assess the credibility of the piece and highlight any areas that may
warrant further investigation.

Freshness check

Score:
8

Notes:
The article discusses nd’s transition to a digital daily edition and a weekly print edition, effective from 1 April 2026. This information aligns with the publication date of the article, indicating freshness. However, the article’s URL suggests it was published on 1 April 2026, which is the same date as the transition. This raises a concern about the immediacy of reporting. Additionally, the article mentions a previous reduction in printing schedule starting 1 May 2025, which is over a year prior. This suggests that the content may have been updated or republished, potentially affecting originality.

Quotes check

Score:
7

Notes:
The article includes direct quotes from Rouzbeh Taheri, chief executive of the nd cooperative. However, these quotes do not appear to be independently verifiable online, raising concerns about their authenticity. Without external verification, the credibility of these quotes is uncertain.

Source reliability

Score:
6

Notes:
The article originates from nd-aktuell.de, the official website of the nd cooperative. As the publisher’s own platform, it may lack independent verification, potentially introducing bias. The reliance on internal sources and the absence of external corroboration diminish the overall reliability of the information presented.

Plausibility check

Score:
7

Notes:
The article’s claims about nd’s transition to a digital daily and weekly print edition are plausible and consistent with industry trends towards digitalisation. However, the lack of independent verification and the potential recycling of older content raise questions about the accuracy and originality of the information.

Overall assessment

Verdict (FAIL, OPEN, PASS): FAIL

Confidence (LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH): MEDIUM

Summary:
The article presents information about nd’s transition to a digital daily and weekly print edition. However, the reliance on internal sources without independent verification, potential recycling of older content, and the absence of corroborating external sources raise significant concerns about the accuracy, originality, and reliability of the information. These issues prevent the content from meeting the necessary standards for publication.

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