Nigeria recorded a significant easing in inflationary pressures last month, with headline inflation declining to 16.05% in October 2025, down sharply from September’s 18.02%, according to figures released on Monday by the National Bureau of Statistics.
The development marks the most substantial monthly deceleration in consumer prices in recent memory, offering a glimmer of hope for millions of Nigerians who have grappled with the crushing weight of rising living costs over the past two years.
The statistical agency’s latest Consumer Price Index report revealed that the year-on-year headline inflation rate stood at 17.82%—a dramatic improvement from the 33.88% recorded in October 2024, though officials cautioned that the comparison reflects a change in the base year to November 2009.
However, the month-on-month data presented a more nuanced picture. The NBS reported that headline inflation accelerated to 0.93% in October from 0.72% in September, indicating that while the overall trend is downward, prices continued to rise during the month, albeit from a lower base.
“This means that in October 2025, the rate of increase in the average price level was higher than the rate of increase in the average price level in September 2025,” the Bureau explained in its technical note, underscoring the complexity of the inflation dynamics at play.
Urban-Rural Divide Narrows
The inflation data revealed a narrowing gap between urban and rural price pressures, with both segments showing substantial year-on-year improvements. Urban inflation averaged 22.68% over the twelve-month period ending October 2025—a striking 11.84 percentage points below the 34.52% recorded a year earlier.
Rural communities, which have historically borne the brunt of food price volatility, experienced even more pronounced relief. The year-on-year rural inflation rate fell to 15.86%, down 15.73 percentage points from October 2024’s 31.59%. On a monthly basis, rural inflation moderated to just 0.45%, declining 0.22 percentage points from September’s 0.67%.
Food Prices: The Turning Point
Perhaps the most dramatic shift occurred in food inflation, which has been the primary driver of Nigeria’s cost-of-living crisis. The year-on-year food inflation rate plummeted to 13.12% in October 2025, representing a staggering 26.04 percentage-point decline from the 39.16% recorded twelve months earlier.
The NBS attributed much of this dramatic decline to the rebasing exercise, though the underlying trend remains encouraging for households that have seen their purchasing power severely eroded.
More tellingly, the month-on-month food inflation figure registered at -0.37% in October, though this represented a 1.21 percentage-point increase from September’s -1.57%. The statistical agency noted that this upward movement reflected rising prices for specific food items, including fresh onions, citrus fruits, pineapples, shrimp, and groundnuts. Leafy vegetables such as ugu and okazi, along with various meat products including goat meat, cow tail, and liver, also contributed to the monthly uptick.
Over the twelve-month period ending October, average food inflation stood at 21.96%—16.16 percentage points lower than the 38.12% recorded in October 2024.
Forecast Vindicated, Optimism Cautious
The October figures largely vindicated projections made by economic analysts at Nairametrics, who had forecast that inflation would settle between 16.20% and 17.76%, down from September’s 18.02%.
Economists who spoke to this reporter attributed the moderation to a confluence of favorable factors: easing food inflation driven by improved harvests, greater stability in foreign exchange markets following policy adjustments by the Central Bank of Nigeria, and more predictable energy costs as fuel supply chains normalized.
“We’re seeing the cumulative effect of several quarters of relatively disciplined monetary policy, improved agricultural output, and some stabilization in the forex market,” noted one analyst who requested anonymity. “The question now is whether this trajectory is sustainable.”
Challenges Remain
Despite the encouraging headline numbers, significant challenges persist. The month-on-month acceleration in both headline and food inflation suggests that underlying price pressures have not been fully extinguished. With the naira still vulnerable to external shocks and domestic demand gradually recovering, policymakers at the Central Bank will need to maintain vigilance.
For ordinary Nigerians, the statistics translate into a complex reality: while prices are rising more slowly than before, they continue to rise nonetheless. A household that struggled to afford basic necessities in September will find only marginal relief in October’s data, particularly as the cumulative effect of two years of elevated inflation has already substantially eroded purchasing power.
As Nigeria approaches the final months of 2025, the inflation trajectory will remain a critical barometer of economic health—and a key determinant of public sentiment toward the government’s economic management. The coming months will reveal whether October’s improvement represents a genuine turning point or merely a temporary reprieve in Nigeria’s ongoing battle with price instability.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s headline inflation dropped sharply to 16.05% in October 2025 from 18.02% in September—the most substantial monthly improvement in recent years. The year-on-year rate of 17.82% represents a dramatic fall from October 2024’s 33.88%.
The critical factors driving this decline:
– Food inflation collapsed to 13.12% from 39.16% a year earlier, offering relief to households hit hardest by rising living costs
-Foreign exchange stability and improved agricultural harvests contributed to easing price pressures
– Rural communities benefited most, with inflation falling to 15.86% compared to urban areas at 22.68%
While the trend is encouraging, month-on-month inflation actually accelerated to 0.93% in October from 0.72% in September, meaning prices are still rising—just more slowly.
For ordinary Nigerians who’ve endured two years of crushing inflation, this represents progress but not yet prosperity.























