Economy May 29, 2026 04:48 AM

May inflation eases in four German states, signaling possible national slowdown

Preliminary regional figures point to lower consumer price growth even as energy costs remain elevated after Iran conflict

By Hana Yamamoto
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Preliminary May data show inflation fell in four major German states, a pattern that suggests the country's harmonised inflation rate may decline this month despite elevated energy and raw material costs linked to the Iran war. Economists' forecasts and forthcoming national and euro zone releases will clarify the picture.

May inflation eases in four German states, signaling possible national slowdown
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Key Points

  • Inflation rates fell in Bavaria (2.6% from 2.9%), North Rhine-Westphalia (2.4% from 2.7%), Baden-Wuerttemberg (2.4% from 2.6%) and Lower Saxony (2.7% from 3.0%) in May.
  • Economists polled forecast Germany's harmonised inflation at 2.8% in May, down from 2.9% the prior month; national figures are due later on Friday.
  • Euro zone inflation is expected to rise to 3.3% in May from 3.0% in April, keeping ECB policy under scrutiny.

Preliminary regional figures released on May 29 indicate that inflation moderated in four of Germany's largest states in May, a development that could translate into a lower national inflation rate for the month despite upward pressure on energy prices from the Iran war.

According to the early data, Bavaria's inflation rate dropped to 2.6% in May from 2.9% in April. North Rhine-Westphalia recorded a fall to 2.4% from 2.7%, Baden-Wuerttemberg moved down to 2.4% from 2.6%, and Lower Saxony's rate declined to 2.7% from 3.0% the previous month.

Those regional softening trends come against a backdrop in which the conflict in Iran has pushed energy and raw material prices higher in recent months. The German government has responded to the changing price environment by revising its inflation outlook, now expecting inflation to accelerate to 2.7% this year and to reach 2.8% in 2027.

Economists polled are forecasting a harmonised national inflation rate for Germany of 2.8% in May, down from 2.9% in April. National-level consumer price figures were scheduled for release later on the same Friday, which will confirm whether the regional declines carry through to the whole economy.

The German preliminary readings arrive ahead of a separate inflation report for the euro zone due on Tuesday. Economists polled expect inflation across the euro area to come in at 3.3% in May, up from 3.0% in the prior month.

Monetary policy considerations remain in focus. The European Central Bank held interest rates steady at its April meeting. However, the recent uptick in bloc-wide inflation increases the likelihood that the bank will move from warnings to concrete policy measures in its next meeting.


Summary of immediate developments

  • Four large German states reported lower inflation rates in May compared with April.
  • Government forecasts show projected acceleration in headline inflation for the near term and into 2027.
  • Euro zone inflation is expected to rise in May, and the ECB's next policy decision is being watched closely.

Risks

  • Elevated energy and raw material prices linked to the Iran war could reverse the regional easing and push national inflation higher - this primarily affects energy-intensive sectors and consumer costs.
  • Upcoming national and euro zone inflation releases introduce uncertainty; if figures surprise to the upside, monetary policy tightening by the ECB could follow and affect fixed-income and banking sectors.

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