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German headline inflation eases in June, core stabilises

By Thomson Reuters Jun 30, 2026 | 7:07 AM

By Maria Martinez

BERLIN, June 30 (Reuters) – German inflation slowed in June on lower energy prices while core inflation stabilised, easing concerns that price pressures from the Iran ​war could spread more widely through the economy.

Inflation ‌eased to 2.4% from 2.7% in May, preliminary data from the national statistics office showed on Tuesday.

Analysts polled by Reuters had expected the EU-harmonised consumer price index to rise 2.5%.

The decline was driven by a ‌slowdown ​in energy inflation to 3.4% in ⁠June from 6.6% in May, ⁠reflecting a cut in fuel taxes introduced by the government to cushion war-related price increases.

Economists expect Germany’s inflation rate to rise in July after the measure expires.

“The available ​figures so far show virtually no evidence of indirect effects from the at times massive increases in energy prices ⁠on the prices of other goods,” ⁠said Ralph Solveen, senior economist at Commerzbank.

Core inflation, ​which excludes volatile food and energy prices, was unchanged at 2.5%.

Services ​inflation also held steady at 3.1%.

The German data comes ‌ahead of Wednesday’s euro zone inflation release. Economists polled by Reuters expect inflation in the bloc to ease to 3.0% in June from 3.2% in May.

The European Central Bank raised ⁠interest rates for the first time in nearly three years in June, seeking to contain inflation before higher energy costs spread more ⁠broadly through the ‌euro zone economy.

The German figures, together with ⁠a slowdown in French inflation reported earlier on ​Tuesday, ‌point to a softer euro zone inflation ​reading for ⁠June, said Claus Vistesen, chief euro zone economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

“It makes an ECB hold in July all but certain, unless oil prices stage a spectacular rebound before the meeting,” Vistesen said.

(Reporting by Maria Martinez and Linda Pasquini. Editing by Friederike Heine ​and Mark Potter)