European Union leaders are due to begin a two-day summit in Brussels to try to strike a deal on the next seven years of EU spending.
High EU expenditure at a time of cutbacks and austerity across the continent is the main issue dividing the 27 member states.
They failed to reach a compromise at a similar summit last November.
The BBC's Europe editor Gavin Hewitt says the summit will almost certainly demand cuts in EU administration.
However, whatever is agreed still has to go to the European Parliament and MEPs are big backers of EU spending, he adds.
The EU Commission - the EU's executive body - had originally wanted a budget ceiling of 1.025tn euros (£885bn; $1.4tn) for 2014-2020, a 5% increase. In November that was trimmed back to 973bn euros and later revised down to 943bn euros.
But with other EU spending commitments included, that would still give an overall budget of 1.011tn euros.
The UK, Germany and other northern European nations want to lower EU spending to mirror the cuts being made by national governments across the continent.
"Start Quote
End QuoteThe mood now remains cautiously optimistic but the Germans, who like to downplay expectations ahead of summits, are saying the talks will be "difficult and divisive". "
Downing Street said on Wednesday that Prime Minister David Cameron was intent on seeking an agreement to lower EU spending, while accepting it would be difficult.
An EU source told BBC News any extra cut would probably be made to growth-related spending in areas such as energy, transport, the digital economy and research.
The biggest spending areas - agriculture and regional development - are largely ring-fenced because of strong national interests, the source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
CompromisesAnother grouping, led by France and Italy, wants to maintain spending but target it more at investment likely to create jobs.
French President Francois Hollande told reporters on Sunday that conditions were "not yet in place" for a deal but also signalled that Paris was prepared to make compromises.
He and German Chancellor Angela Merkel held talks in Paris on Wednesday before attending a France-Germany football match.
How far they can go
- The European Commission's original proposal for a budget of 1.025tn euros was whittled down to 943bn at the November summit
- An EU source has told BBC News that a further reduction is now likely, bringing the budget down to 920bn
- The UK has argued for a figure as low as 886bn and its calls for restraint are backed by Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden
- France and Italy favour the November figure but want spending refocused on investment for growth
- Poland, the biggest of the new member-states which benefit significantly from subsidies, has said further deep cuts to the budget are "inconceivable"
- The European Parliament, which can vote down the budget, is likely to oppose any deep cuts
- If the new seven-year budget is blocked, the 2013 budget will be rolled over into 2014, creating uncertainty over future EU spending
Mrs Merkel's spokesman said she and President Hollande had had "a short but intense meeting... to see what kind of agreement could be made".
Mrs Merkel - seen as the powerbroker in the summit - has already acknowledged that the talks will be "very difficult".
In Brussels, a European Parliament spokesman warned that more severe cuts would leave the commission unable to do its job as the EU integrates more deeply in response to the financial crisis.
"How can we imagine that an EU institution can ensure a proper banking union with a budget that is cut by whatever billions in figures we hear, here and there?" said spokesman Olivier Bailly.
"At the moment, there is a need for a reality check between the requests that are sent to the commission, the council, the parliament, or the European Central Bank, and the budget - the means - that are given to these institutions to fulfil their commitments."
The split in the EU reflects the gap between richer European countries and those that rely most on EU funding.
The argument for higher spending is supported by many countries that are net beneficiaries, including Poland, Hungary and Spain.
Others, mostly the big net contributors, argue it is unacceptable at a time of austerity.
Germany, the UK, France and Italy are the biggest net contributors to the budget, which amounts to about 1% of the EU's overall GDP.
Analysts say failure to reach an agreement on its seven-year budget would mean the EU falling back on more expensive annual budgets.
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