Eurozone inflation rate confirmed at 2% in June
UCapital24 Media
Share:
Eurozone consumer price inflation was confirmed at 2.0% year-on-year in June 2025, marking a slight increase from May’s eight-month low of 1.9% and aligning closely with the European Central Bank’s (ECB) official inflation target.
This stabilization at the 2% mark provides some reassurance that inflation pressures have neither accelerated dramatically nor declined further, suggesting a relatively balanced inflation environment for the region.
Delving into the components, services inflation showed a modest acceleration, rising to 3.3% from May’s three-year low of 3.2%. This uptick reflects continued strength in sectors such as housing, healthcare, and leisure, where price pressures tend to be more persistent and less sensitive to short-term economic fluctuations.
In contrast, the pace of decline in energy prices eased somewhat, with prices falling 2.6% compared to a sharper 3.6% drop the previous month, signaling some stabilization in the volatile energy segment which has been a key driver of inflation swings in recent periods.
Meanwhile, inflationary pressures softened for certain goods categories. Non-energy industrial goods recorded a slower increase of 0.5%, down from 0.6% in May, indicating moderated price growth in items such as clothing, electronics, and household goods. Similarly, the food, alcohol, and tobacco category saw inflation ease slightly to 3.1% from 3.2%, reflecting more stable prices in essential consumer staples despite ongoing global supply chain challenges.
Core inflation, which excludes the more volatile categories of energy, food, alcohol, and tobacco, steadied at 2.3%. This rate marks the lowest level for core inflation since January 2022 and is closely watched by the ECB as a key indicator of underlying inflationary trends in the economy.
The steadiness in core inflation suggests that while headline inflation remains near target, underlying price pressures have eased somewhat, posing a nuanced challenge for policymakers striving to balance growth with price stability.
Overall, the June inflation data paints a picture of gradual stabilization in the eurozone’s price dynamics, with a mix of persistent inflation in services and moderating pressures in goods, which will likely influence the ECB’s policy decisions in the coming months.
