Consumer prices in Bavaria moved into negative territory in May 2026, with the regional Consumer Price Index (CPI) falling 0.2% month-over-month, according to data updated on 29 May 2026. This marks a sharp reversal from April 2026, when Bavaria’s CPI rose 0.5% compared with the previous month.
The month-over-month comparison shows that price momentum in Germany’s largest state has cooled significantly. While April’s 0.5% increase suggested solid upward pressure on consumer prices, May’s -0.2% reading indicates a pullback, implying that some categories of goods and services may have seen outright price declines. The figures compare the change in prices each month with the immediately preceding month, highlighting a clear shift from rising to falling prices within just one reporting period.
For policymakers and market participants watching German and euro area inflation dynamics, the Bavarian data underscore a loss of short-term price momentum at the regional level. Although these numbers reflect only one state, the move from 0.5% to -0.2% month-over-month will likely feed into expectations about broader inflation trends in Germany and could influence views on the timing and extent of future monetary policy adjustments.
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