Nigeria Inflation Rate Keeps Slowing for 10th Month
2026-02-16 13:28
By
Luisa Carvalho
1 min. read
Nigeria’s annual inflation rate eased slightly to 15.10% in January 2026 from 15.15% in the prior month, marking the tenth consecutive monthly decline.
This marks the lowest level since November 2020, partly due to a stronger currency reducing the cost of imports.
Food inflation, the largest component of the inflation basket, continued to fall for the sixth month, reaching 8.89%, mainly on account of staples like cooking oil, grains and vegetables amid ample supply.
Prices also slowed for other CPI items such as recreation & culture (1.52% vs 12.12%); clothing & footwear (10.91% vs 13.16%) and alcoholic beverages & tobacco (13.62% vs 14.98%), but climbed for education (22.48% vs 16.36%).
The core inflation rate, which strips out the volatile prices of agricultural produce and energy, remained elevated but moderated for the seventh month to 17.72% in January 2026, the lowest since October 2022.
On a monthly basis, the CPI fell by 2.88% in January, after a 0.54% rise in the prior month.