Nigeria’s headline inflation rate eased significantly to 16.05% in October 2025, down from 18.02% in September, according to the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) report from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
Key Details from the Report
- The drop marks the seventh straight month of easing inflation in the country.
- Food inflation declined to 13.12% year-on-year, a sharp improvement from the 39.16% recorded in October 2024.
- Core inflation (which excludes volatile food and energy items) stood at 18.69% year-on-year, with a month-on-month rate of 1.416%, nearly unchanged from September.
- On a regional level, the highest state-level inflation was recorded in Ekiti State at 20.14%, while the lowest was in Bauchi State at 9.99%.
What’s Behind the Decline?
Economists attribute the slowdown in headline inflation primarily to:
- Improved food supply and harvesting conditions, which helped contain food price growth.
- Continued monetary-policy and currency-stabilisation efforts, which have helped dampen inflation expectations.
- A stabilising exchange rate environment reducing imported–price pressure.
However, the relatively high core inflation rate hints that underlying price pressures—such as housing, transport and other services—remain elevated.
What Comes Next?
Analysts expect a mild further slowdown in inflation in November, provided food supply remains stable and energy/transport prices hold steady. If food prices swing upward again or external shocks hit (e.g., exchange-rate volatility or fuel hikes), inflation could stagnate or reverse.
Policy Implications
- The data gives policymakers room to maintain or gradually ease monetary-policy restrictions—though the high core inflation means they must still proceed cautiously.
- The large state-level variation suggests that inflation-fighting efforts may need to be tailored regionally, especially in states like Ekiti where inflation remains significantly above the national average.
- Consumers and businesses may begin to see modest relief in cost pressures, which could support private-sector activity and spending—but the benefit may arrive unevenly across states.




