Inflation drops to 16.05%, 7th consecutive monthly decline

Breezynews
3 Min Read
The new figure represents a 1.96% decrease, strengthening signs that inflationary pressures have continued to cool since April, this year.
On a year-on-year basis, headline inflation fell by 17.82% compared to October 2024, when it stood at 33.88%.
However, month-on-month inflation slightly increased to 0.9% in October, up by 0.21% from the 0.72% recorded in September.

Food inflation also experienced a significant decline, easing to 13.12% year-over-year in October 2025. This marks a sharp reduction of 26.04% from the 39.16% recorded in October 2024.

The NBS noted that part of the decline is due to the new base year adopted for computing the CPI.
But month-on-month food inflation rose to -0.37% in October, an increase of 1.21% from September’s -1.57%.

The bureau attributed this rise to increases in the average prices of onions, fresh fruits (such as oranges and pineapples), shrimp, groundnuts, vegetables (including ugu and okazi), and various meat products, including goat meat, cow tail, and liver.

The average annual food inflation rate for the twelve months ending October 2025 stood at 21.96%, which is 16.16% points lower than the 38.12% recorded in October 2024.
Urban inflation dipped to 15.65% year-on-year in October 2025, down by 20.73% from the 36.38% posted in October 2024.
On a month-on-month basis, urban inflation rose to 1.14%, slightly higher than the 0.74% recorded in September.
The 12-month average for urban inflation stood at 22.68%, a 11.84% decrease from the 34.52% recorded a year earlier.
Rural inflation followed a similar pattern, falling to 15.86% year-on-year in October 2025 —15.73% lower than the 31.59% recorded in October 2024.
Month-on-month rural inflation slowed to 0.45%, down by 0.22% from 0.67% in September.
The 12-month average rural inflation rate was 20.81% in October, marking a 9.42-point decrease from the 30.24% recorded in October 2024.
Nigeria’s sustained decline in inflation suggests improving price stability, though the slight rise in month-on-month figures indicates lingering pressures in key food and urban markets.
Share This Article
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *