Finnish Inflation Rate at 13-Month High
2026-03-13 06:25
By
Czyrill Jean Coloma
1 min. read
Consumer prices in Finland rose 0.6% year-on-year in February 2026, rebounding from a 0.2% decline in January.
This marked the highest reading since January 2025, largely due to a significant easing of deflation in housing and utilities (-0.2% vs -2.3% in January) and prices stalling in transport (0% vs -0.2%).
Overall inflation was also driven by higher consumer prices in furnishings, household equipment and routine household maintenance (3.9% vs 1.6%), recreation, sport and culture (1.7% vs 1.3%), and restaurants and accommodation (2.6% vs 2%).
In contrast, costs edged down for food and non-alcoholic beverages (1.4% vs 1.6%) and alcoholic beverages and tobacco (3.6% vs 3.7%), while it declined for clothing and footwear (-0.1% vs 0.3%).
On a monthly basis, consumer prices increased to a more than three-year high of 1.1%, recovering from a 0.2% drop in the previous month.
Meanwhile, the harmonized consumer prices rose 1.8% from 1% in January, marking its highest level since September.