British consumer inflation remains steady at 2.8% in May

British consumer inflation remains steady at 2.8% in May
Rivanshi Rakhrai
17-Jun-2026, 12:00 PM

powered by

Invezz
GBP short (vs USD)

Buy USD/short GBP via a GBPUSD short. CPI stayed at 2.8% and came in below forecasts, but the bigger tell is that services inflation still re-accelerated (CPI services 3.7% vs 3.2%). That mix keeps the BoE cautious, so sterling’s “lower inflation” relief is likely to fade as markets refocus on sticky services and the next BoE decision.

Key Risk: BoE turns clearly dovish and signals faster rate cuts, driving a sustained GBP selloff.

UK rate cut hedge (2Y gilt)

Sell UK 2-year gilts (buy 2Y gilt futures) into the next BoE decision. Inflation is still above target and services inflation is rising, so the market’s odds of aggressive near-term cuts are overstated. The transport-driven monthly print (0.2%) plus sticky services argues yields should stay firm even after the CPI beat.

Key Risk: BoE explicitly shifts to a faster-cut path despite services inflation, causing 2Y yields to drop sharply.

  • UK inflation remained unchanged at 2.8% in May 2026.
  • Transport costs pushed prices higher, while food eased inflation.
  • Markets expect the Bank of England to keep rates steady.

British inflation remained unchanged in May, according to official data released on Wednesday, providing a closely watched update for policymakers and investors ahead of the Bank of England's latest interest rate decision.

The Consumer Prices Index rose by 2.8% in the 12 months to May 2026, matching the annual rate recorded in April.

Every month, CPI increased by 0.2% in May, the same pace seen in May 2025.

The broader Consumer Prices Index, including owner-occupiers' housing costs, also remained unchanged at 3.0% in the 12 months to May.

Monthly CPIH growth stood at 0.2%, unchanged from the same month a year earlier.

Inflation defies expectations

The inflation reading came in below economists' expectations.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast that CPI inflation would rise to 3.0% in May.

Instead, inflation held at the 13-month low reached in April.

Following the release of the data, sterling weakened slightly as markets digested the lower-than-expected inflation figure.

The latest figures arrive just one day before the Bank of England announces its next monetary policy decision.

Transport costs drive inflation higher

According to the official data, transport made the largest upward contribution to the monthly change in both CPIH and CPI annual inflation rates.

However, the increase was partially offset by lower inflation in food and non-alcoholic beverages, which made the largest downward contribution to annual price growth.

The data suggest that while some areas of the economy continue to experience price pressures, easing food costs helped prevent a broader acceleration in inflation during the month.

Mixed signals from core inflation measures

Underlying inflation indicators presented a mixed picture.

Core CPIH, which excludes energy, food, alcohol, and tobacco, increased by 2.8% in the 12 months to May, unchanged from April.

Within this measure, the annual inflation rate for goods slowed to 2.0% from 2.4%, while services inflation rose to 3.6% from 3.4%.

Meanwhile, Core CPI rose to 2.6% in May from 2.5% in April.

The increase was slightly smaller than economists had anticipated.

The annual inflation rate for CPI goods slowed to 2.0% from 2.4%, while CPI services inflation accelerated sharply to 3.7% from 3.2%.

The Bank of England closely monitors services inflation as an indicator of underlying domestic price pressures.

Focus on future inflation risks

Inflation has remained above the Bank of England's 2% target for most of the past five years.

In April, the central bank said inflation was likely to rise above 3.5% by the end of 2026 and could potentially exceed 6% in an adverse scenario.

Economists cited the impact of the US-Iran conflict as one factor keeping British inflation higher than the BoE had projected in January.

Britain has been particularly exposed because it relies on imported natural gas.

However, financial markets have recently taken comfort from signs of an agreement between the United States and Iran that could reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for global oil exports.

The agreement is reportedly expected to be signed in Switzerland on Friday.

While BoE Governor Andrew Bailey has indicated that policymakers have time to assess the economic effects of the conflict, some MPC members remain concerned that businesses could pass higher costs on to consumers more broadly or that the situation could weaken public confidence in the central bank's ability to control inflation.