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June CPI drops to 3.5% YoY, down from 4.2% in May, with a 0.4% monthly decline and gas prices falling 9.7%—see the full breakdown.
The Consumer Price Index for June slipped to an annual 3.5%, easing from 4.2% in May, while overall prices fell 0.4% month‑over‑month—the biggest monthly drop in four years, driven largely by a 9.7% plunge in gasoline costs【3】.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Annual CPI (June) | 3.5% |
| Prior annual CPI (May) | 4.2% |
| Monthly price change (June) | –0.4% |
| Gasoline price change (June) | –9.7% |
The June CPI reading shows a modest cooling of inflation, but prices remain 3.5% higher than a year ago, still above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target. Core CPI, which strips out food and energy, rose 2.6% YoY, down from 2.9% in May, indicating that underlying price pressures are easing more than many analysts expected【3】. Over the past five years, annual inflation has ranged from a low of 2.3% to a high of 9.1%, underscoring the persistence of elevated price growth despite the recent monthly dip【1】.
The Bay Area’s inflation rate stayed at 3.8% YoY, slightly higher than the national 3.5% figure, driven by food price gains of 5.2% and gasoline costs that are 20.8% higher than a year ago【2】. While the national CPI cooled, oil markets reacted to geopolitical tension: Brent crude rose 4.6% to $87.13 a barrel after the United States and Iran each claimed control of the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for about 20% of global oil shipments【3】. The mixed price signals have left Fed officials divided—about half favor another rate hike this year, while the other half prefer to wait for further evidence of easing inflation【3】.
The June CPI decline reduces immediate pressure on the Federal Reserve to raise its policy rate, but core inflation remains above target, and Fed Chair Kevin Warsh reiterated a “no tolerance” stance for high inflation【3】. Minutes from the June 16‑17 meeting highlighted the split among policymakers, reflecting uncertainty about the path forward amid volatile energy prices and ongoing geopolitical risks.
The June CPI data shows that while headline inflation is cooling, price levels remain elevated and core pressures linger, leaving the Fed’s next move dependent on whether the recent dip proves durable amid ongoing energy‑price volatility.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 3 outlets · Jul 16, 2026 · How we report
The year‑over‑year inflation rate fell to 3.5% in June, down from 4.2% in May.
Core inflation was unchanged month‑to‑month and rose 2.6% annually, remaining above the Fed’s target.
Lower gas and oil prices contributed to the 0.4% monthly drop in CPI, but core inflation, which excludes these categories, stayed flat.
Fed officials are split; some see the data as reducing pressure for hikes, while others warn that persistent core inflation could prompt tighter policy.
Earlier spikes in energy costs and ongoing “sticky” inflation in services, which are less responsive to price cuts, could keep overall inflation higher for some time.