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South Africa Inflation Inches Up to 3.1% in March as Services Costs Rise

Education, housing, and financial services drive modest price increases despite easing food inflation.

Telling African Stories One Voice at a time!

South Africa recorded a slight uptick in inflation in March 2026, with annual consumer price inflation rising to 3.1%, up from 3.0% in February, according to data released by Statistics South Africa.

On a monthly basis, consumer prices increased by 0.6%, reflecting modest but broad-based price pressures across key sectors of the economy.

The main contributors to the rise were housing and utilities, food, and financial services. Six of the 13 major spending categories tracked by the statistical agency recorded price increases during the month.

These included transport, education, and restaurants, indicating that both essential and discretionary spending categories are experiencing upward pressure.

Education costs stood out as a significant driver of inflation, with tuition fees rising by 5.4% year-on-year. Private education recorded the steepest increase at 7.5%, highlighting sustained pressure on household budgets.

Transport costs, however, remained in negative territory, falling by 1.6% compared to a year earlier, although analysts noted that the rate of decline is slowing.

Food inflation eased slightly to 3.6%, supported by price declines in several categories. Fruits, vegetables, cereals, and dairy products all recorded deflation, with dairy prices falling for a tenth consecutive month.

Despite this relief in food prices, officials warned that inflationary pressures could rise in the coming months, as the latest data does not yet reflect April’s fuel price increases.

Economists also noted a divergence in inflation trends, with goods inflation continuing to slow while services inflation is gradually accelerating, driven by education, hospitality, and financial services costs.

The overall inflation environment remains relatively contained compared to historical levels, but analysts say future movements will depend heavily on energy prices, global supply conditions, and domestic demand trends.

Telling African Stories One Voice at a time!
Victoria Emeto
the authorVictoria Emeto
A bright and self-driven graduate trainee at AV1 News, she brings fresh energy and curiosity to her role. With a strong academic background in Mass Communication, she has a solid foundation in storytelling, audience engagement, and media ethics. Her passion lies in the evolving media landscape, particularly how emerging technologies are reshaping content creation and distribution. She is already carving a niche for herself as a skilled journalist, honing her reporting, writing, and research abilities through hands-on experience. She actively explores the intersection of digital innovation and traditional journalism.

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