Norway Inflation Rate Falls to 10-Month Low
2026-03-10 07:16
By
Kyrie Dichosa
1 min. read
The annual inflation rate in Norway sharply eased to 2.7% in February 2026, the lowest since late April, down from 3.6% in January.
The main downward pressure came from slower price growth for food and non-alcoholic beverages (3.3% vs 4.2% in January), housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels (2.2% vs 4.3%), and transport (3.2% vs 4.4%).
Inflation also moderated for furnishings, household equipment and routine household maintenance (0.6% vs 1.7%), recreation, sport and culture (3.9% vs 4.3%), and restaurants and accommodation services (5.1% vs 5.8%).
In contrast, inflation picked up for clothing and footwear (1.8% vs 0.7%), alcoholic beverages, tobacco and narcotics (3.0% vs 2.8%), and health (3.2% vs 2.7%).
On a monthly basis, the CPI rose 0.6%, the same pace as in January, marking the largest increase since last July.
Meanwhile, the CPI-ATE, which excludes energy and tax effects, rose 3% year-on-year, down from January’s 3.4% increase.