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Home Business & Economy

Nigeria’s Headline Inflation Hits Six-Month High

June 15, 2026
in Business & Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Inflation
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Nigeria’s headline inflation rate has ticked upward for the third consecutive month, reaching 15.93% year-on-year in May 2026, the highest level recorded in six months, according to data released on Monday by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

The figure marks a 24-basis-point increase from the 15.69% recorded in April, reigniting concerns that a hard-fought disinflation trend may be losing ground to a confluence of global and domestic pressures.

Consumer prices rose 1.7% on a month-on-month basis, as the compound effects of elevated fuel costs and persistent food price pressures continued to erode household purchasing power across Africa’s most populous nation.

Nigeria’s inflation rate has accelerated for two consecutive months due to the negative effects of Middle East tensions, which forced Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz, restricting oil-laden vessels from passing through the channel since February 2026.

While Nigeria, as an oil-producing nation, stands to benefit from higher crude prices on paper, the country’s deregulated fuel market has meant that ordinary Nigerians bear the full brunt of pump price increases.

For a fully deregulated fuel market like Nigeria’s, where pump prices track global crude movements with limited buffering, the conflict translated quickly into domestic cost increases.

Food inflation remains the most visceral pressure point for consumers. Food inflation, the largest component of Nigeria’s inflation basket, quickened to 16.06% in April, with increases seen across key staples, including millet, yam flour, ginger, beef, garri, tubers, and pepper, while transportation prices rose by 16%.

The Middle East conflict disrupted natural gas production and shipping, and nitrogen-based fertilizers, which are manufactured from natural gas, saw urea prices rise approximately 49.6% globally, while diammonium phosphate increased roughly 14.9% and potash by around 5%.

The picture on the ground is stark. Analysts at Meristem Securities noted that food price movements in May 2026 were broadly mixed, with key items such as maize, sorghum, paddy rice, and soya beans all recording price upticks, reflecting pre-harvest supply tightening and sustained pressure in the food market.

Meanwhile, international wheat prices increased to $303 per metric ton in May from $282 in April, while Thailand’s benchmark rice prices jumped to $440 per metric ton from $403, signaling continued imported inflation risks for Nigeria.

While the headline figure of 15.93% might appear modest compared to the nightmare of recent years, inflation climbed from 13.25% in 2020 to 17% in 2021 and continued its ascent, hitting 18.8%, 24.7%, and 31.4% in 2022, 2023, and 2024, respectively. Economists warn that the statistical improvement masks a harsher reality for ordinary Nigerians.

The NBS data showing year-on-year food inflation at 16.06% in April is technically a significant improvement over 25% a year earlier.

But on a month-on-month basis, prices are still moving upward every single month of 2026. For the trader at Mile 12 market, the farmer in Benue, and the household in Alimosho trying to feed a family, that is the number that matters.

The currency has also offered little relief. Exchange-rate dynamics remained mildly inflationary during the period, with the naira depreciating 0.64% to an average of ₦1,370 per dollar in May, from ₦1,361.22 per dollar in April.

At the current exchange rate of approximately ₦1,388 to the dollar, Nigeria’s minimum wage of ₦70,000 translates to approximately $42 per month, placing Nigeria among the lowest minimum wages in the world in dollar terms.

Monday’s data surprised on the downside relative to market consensus. The median estimate of five economists in a Bloomberg survey had projected inflation at 16.2%. That the actual figure came in lower offers cold comfort, as the direction of travel upward remains deeply concerning.

Earlier in the year, the CBN had forecast that headline inflation would decelerate to 12.94% in 2026, down from an estimated 21.26% in 2025, as earlier monetary tightening filtered through the economy and supply-side pressures eased. That target now looks increasingly optimistic.

The pace of disinflation has slowed in recent months, following a small interest rate cut by the Central Bank of Nigeria, which had signaled expectations that inflation would continue to moderate. With May’s data showing acceleration rather than moderation, questions are mounting about whether that policy signal was premature.

Nigeria has endured an extraordinary stretch of inflation turbulence. In the country’s 65 years of independence, the inflation rate has ranged from -3.7% to 72.8%, averaging 16.6% annually.

Each new shock, from fuel subsidy removal to naira devaluation to global commodity disruptions, has tested the resilience of an economy where more than six in ten citizens already live below the poverty line.

For now, the headline number tells only part of the story. The true measure of Nigeria’s inflation crisis is not found in the NBS tables but in the daily calculus of millions of families deciding what to eat, what to forgo, and how far a devalued naira will stretch by month’s end.

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Nigeria’s inflation rate climbed to a six-month high of 15.93% in May 2026, and the primary culprit is clear: the Middle East conflict.

By forcing the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the war has driven up global fuel and fertilizer costs, which have fed directly into higher food and transportation prices at home, hitting hardest a population where over 60% already live in poverty and where the minimum wage is worth just $42 a month.

Prices are still rising every single month, and the Central Bank’s earlier optimism about sustained disinflation now looks misplaced. Unless the geopolitical tension eases and the naira stabilizes, Nigerians should brace for continued pressure on their cost of living.

Tags: InflationNational Bureau of Statistics
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June 15, 2026
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