Taiwan Inflation Rate Hits 10-Month High
2026-03-06 08:17
By
Czyrill Jean Coloma
1 min. read
Taiwan’s annual inflation rate climbed to 1.75% in February 2026, picking up from a five-year low of 0.69% in the previous month.
It recorded the highest reading since April 2025, influenced in part by Lunar New Year holiday effects, while markets weigh the potential economic fallout from the Middle East conflict.
Prices increased at a faster pace for housing (2.06% vs 1.82% in January), while deflation eased in transportation and communication (-0.86% vs -1.95%).
Overall inflation was also supported by stronger price increases in health (1.73% vs 1.62%) and miscellaneous goods and services (5.06% vs 1.99%), alongside a rebound in education and entertainment (4.55% vs -0.97%).
Meanwhile, price pressures moderated for food (0.21% vs 1.16%) and clothing (0.87% vs 1.58%).
On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, consumer prices rose 0.19%, from 0.10% in January.
For the first two months of the year, the CPI increased 1.23% compared with the same period of the previous year.