Finnish Inflation Rate Highest Since 2024
2026-04-14 05:28
By
Czyrill Jean Coloma
1 min. read
The annual inflation rate in Finland further climbed to 1.3% in March 2026 from a thirteen-month high of 0.6% in the previous month.
It marked the highest reading since June 2024, primarily driven by a rebound in housing and utilities (1.2% vs -0.2% in February) and a notable increase in transport (3.1% vs 0%) amid global energy disruptions driven by the ongoing Middle East conflict.
In contrast, costs eased for food and non-alcoholic beverages (0.5% vs 1.4%), furniture, household appliances and general housekeeping (2.1% vs 3.9%), and restaurants and hotels (2.5% vs 2.6%).
In addition, deflation deepened for clothing and footwear (-0.9% vs -0.1%), while it remained unchanged for alcoholic beverages and tobacco (3.6% vs 3.6%).
On a monthly basis, consumer prices eased to 0.7% from a more than three-year high of 1.1% in February.
Meanwhile, harmonized consumer prices rose 2.5% in March, from 1.8% in the prior month, marking its highest level since September 2023.