Kenya Inflation Rate Cools for 1st Time in 4 Months

2026-06-30 09:06 By Luisa Carvalho 1 min. read

The annual inflation rate in Kenya eased to 6.4% in June 2026 from 6.7% in the prior month, which was the steepest since January 2024.

This marked the first slowdown in overall inflation since February, amid softer increases in prices of transportation (16.1% vs 16.5% in May) and food (8.6% vs 9.4%).

On a monthly basis, the CPI went up by 0.3%, down from a 1.6% advance in the month before.



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Kenya Inflation Rate Cools for 1st Time in 4 Months
The annual inflation rate in Kenya eased to 6.4% in June 2026 from 6.7% in the prior month, which was the steepest since January 2024. This marked the first slowdown in overall inflation since February, amid softer increases in prices of transportation (16.1% vs 16.5% in May) and food (8.6% vs 9.4%). On a monthly basis, the CPI went up by 0.3%, down from a 1.6% advance in the month before.
2026-06-30
Kenya Inflation Rate Hits Near 2-1/2-Year High
The annual inflation rate in Kenya quickened further to 6.7% in May 2026, the highest since January 2024, from 5.6% in the prior month. The biggest upward pressure came from prices of transportation (16.5% vs 10% in April), as the government hiked fuel prices in April and May, in the wake of rising global energy costs amid the US-Israel conflict with Iran. Prices also advanced faster for food and non-alcoholic beverages (9.4% vs 8.8%) and housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels (3.4% vs 2.4%).
2026-05-29
Kenya Inflation Rate Accelerates to 2-Year High of 5.6%
The annual inflation rate in Kenya picked up to 5.6% in April 2026, the highest since March 2024, from 4.4% in the prior month. The spike in inflation reflects rising costs for petroleum products amid the Middle East conflict, which has pushed up transportation prices (10% vs 3.8% in March). Additional upward pressure came mostly from food & non-alcoholic beverages (8.8% vs 7.7%); housing & utilities (2.4% vs 2%); education (3.2% vs 3.3%) and miscellaneous goods & services (2.7% vs 2.5%). On a monthly basis, consumer prices rose by 1.4%, the most since April 2022, after a 0.5% increase in March, with transportation prices surging 6.5%. Inflation is expected to quicken further in the coming months, despite government measures to cushion consumers, including a reduction in fuel taxes. The VAT on petroleum products was cut from 16% to 8%, and the fuel stabilisation fund was deployed, with KES 6.2 billion (about $40 million) spent earlier this month to limit pump price increases.
2026-04-29