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Nigeria’s food inflation hits double digits at 12.12% in February
Nigeria’s food inflation rate rose to 12.12% year-on-year in February 2026, pushing the indicator back into double-digit territory after a sharp drop to single digits in January.
Data from the Consumer Price Index (CPI) report released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) shows that food inflation increased from 8.89% in January 2026 to 12.12% in February 2026, representing a 3.23 percentage point rise month-on-month.
Nairametrics earlier reported that Nigeria’s food inflation rate eased to 8.89% year-on-year in January 2026, marking its first single-digit reading in 128 months and the lowest level in 174 months.
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**What the NBS report says **
Although the latest reading reflects an increase from January’s historic slowdown, food inflation remains far below the level recorded a year earlier. The NBS report shows that the February figure is 14.86 percentage points lower than the 26.98% recorded in February 2025.
February recorded a 4.69% month-on-month increase, signalling renewed upward pressure in food prices.
The NBS attributed the increase to rising prices of key food commodities across markets.
**Broader price trends remain lower than last year **
Despite the February rebound, longer-term indicators still point to a significant moderation in food price growth compared with 2025.
The NBS reported that the average annual food inflation rate for the twelve months ending February 2026 stood at 19.08%, sharply lower than the 37.40% recorded in February 2025.
This suggests that while short-term volatility persists in food markets, the overall inflation trajectory over the past year has softened considerably.
**State-level food price disparities persist **
State-level data from the CPI report showed that food inflation varied widely across the country.
On a year-on-year basis, Kogi recorded the highest food inflation rate at 26.91%, followed by Adamawa at 23.12% and Benue at 21.89%.
At the lower end of the spectrum, Katsina recorded the slowest rise in food prices at 5.09%, while Bauchi and Imo posted 7.09% and 7.65% respectively.
Month-on-month data showed that Bayelsa recorded the highest increase in food prices at 8.81%, followed by Ebonyi at 8.51% and Edo at 7.72%. Meanwhile, Katsina recorded a slight decline of -0.70%, while Nasarawa and Kano recorded increases of 0.17% and 1.39%, respectively.
Overall, the February CPI report reflects a mixed inflation picture. Food inflation has risen again after January’s historic slowdown, but the broader trend still shows a substantial easing from the extreme price pressures recorded a year earlier.
**What you should know **
The February CPI report also showed a slight easing in Nigeria’s overall inflation rate.
Headline inflation declined marginally to 15.06% in February 2026, compared with 15.10% recorded in January 2026.
On a year-on-year basis, the headline rate was 11.21 percentage points lower than the 26.27% recorded in February 2025, reflecting a broad moderation in consumer price pressures over the past year.
Food and non-alcoholic beverages remained the largest contributor to headline inflation, accounting for 6.03 percentage points of the overall inflation figure, showing the dominant role of food prices in Nigeria’s inflation dynamics.