Thailand CPI Falls Sharply in February
2026-03-05 03:35
By
Kyrie Dichosa
1 min. read
Consumer prices in Thailand fell 0.88% year-on-year in February 2026, exceeding expectations of a 0.50% decline and accelerating from January’s 0.66% drop.
This marked the eleventh consecutive month of deflation, the longest stretch since the pandemic, and the sharpest in the sequence, keeping inflation well below the central bank’s 1%–3% target range.
The government forecasts that March headline CPI may fall at a slower pace than February and noted that headline inflation could reach the target this year, depending on the Middle East conflict and its impact on oil prices.
The ministry added that the country is not in deflation, as core inflation remains positive.
Core consumer prices, which exclude volatile items such as food and energy, rose 0.56% year-on-year, slightly above the anticipated 0.50% increase but down from January’s 0.60% gain, marking the smallest rise since July 2024.