South Africa’s annual consumer inflation eased to 3% in February 2026, aligning with the central bank’s target and marking a decline from the 3.5% recorded in January.
The latest data released on Wednesday by Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) showed that consumer prices rose by 0.4% month-on-month in February, signaling continued moderation in price pressures across key sectors of the economy.
The development brings inflation back to the South African Reserve Bank’s (SARB) target level, offering relief to policymakers and consumers while raising fresh questions about the outlook amid global uncertainties.
The February inflation data highlights a broad-based easing in price pressures, driven largely by moderation in goods and services inflation. Stats SA noted that key sectors such as housing, food, and financial services remained the primary contributors to overall inflation.
Housing and utilities increased by 4.8%, contributing 1.1 percentage points to the headline inflation rate.
Food and non-alcoholic beverages rose by 3.7%, adding 0.7 of a percentage point.
Insurance and financial services climbed by 4.7%, contributing 0.5 of a percentage point.
Inflation for goods slowed to 1.9% in February from 2.7% in January, while services inflation moderated to 3.8% from 4.2%.
The latest reading places inflation exactly at the SARB’s 3% target, the first time since June 2025 that the benchmark has been achieved.
Analysts have cautioned that despite the encouraging data, inflationary pressures could resurface due to external shocks, particularly from global energy markets and currency movements. The February figures, they note, may not yet reflect recent geopolitical developments.
“This data largely predates the war on Iran, though, as well as the resulting spike in oil prices and the weakening of the rand exchange rate, both of which will be … inflationary,” said Elna Moolman, Head of South Africa Macroeconomic Research at Standard Bank, quoted by Reuters.
These risks suggest that inflation could trend higher in the coming months, depending on how global oil prices and exchange rates evolve.







