Price pressure finally chilled out, and that gave stretched households a rare breather while officials took a victory lap.
Inflation cools off
Inflation cools off
- South Africa’s CPI landed at 3.0 percent.
- February came in below January’s 3.5 percent.
- Monthly movement stayed mild at 0.4 percent.
- Fuel costs sank and dragged the number lower.
- Petrol and diesel got cheaper at pumps.
- Food inflation also backed off a bit.
- Cereals gave buyers some breathing room.
- Meat items stopped climbing as fast.
- Cooking oils eased up for households.
- Harvest-linked produce looked less brutal.
- Alcohol and tobacco got pricier after duties.
- Restaurants kept nudging menu prices upward.
- Health services stayed above the main rate.
- Education fees also kept pressing upward.
- The government called the reading a stability sign.
- The Reserve Bank target still contains it.
- GCIS praised calmer pricing across essentials.
- Analysts expect 2026 to stay fairly tame.
- Oil swings could still wreck that outlook.
- Electricity hikes remain an annoying risk.
- Crop trouble could jack food costs again.
- Households catch a break on commuting costs.
- Grocery budgets might stretch a little further.
- Businesses get lighter transport and logistics bills.
- Borrowers could see rate relief later.