Inflation MoM by Country

Latest released Inflation MoM value for every supported currency, with the previous reading, the change between releases, reference date, frequency, unit, and source.

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Economy
Inflation MoM across supported currencies

Month-over-month change in the consumer price index, measuring short-term inflationary momentum.

Updated 04 May 2026 06:03 UTC.
6 with data 6 supported currencies
Each row links to the per-currency reference page and the underlying API endpoint at /api/v1/announcements/{currency}/inflation_mom. Non-USD endpoints require an API key query parameter.
Country / Currency Latest Previous Change Reference Frequency Unit Source
United Kingdom
GBP · British Pound
3.3
31 Mar 2026
3.6
28 Feb 2026
▼ -0.3 31 Mar 2026 Monthly %MoM ONS/BoE
Eurozone
EUR · Euro
1.9
01 Dec 2025
2.1
01 Nov 2025
▼ -0.2 01 Dec 2025 Monthly %MoM ECB/Eurostat
Canada
CAD · Canadian Dollar
0.9
31 Mar 2026
0.5
28 Feb 2026
▲ +0.4 31 Mar 2026 Monthly %MoM Bank of Canada/StatCan
United States
USD · US Dollar
0.9
31 Mar 2026
0.3
28 Feb 2026
▲ +0.6 31 Mar 2026 Monthly %MoM FRED (BEA/BLS/Fed)
Denmark
DKK · Danish Krone
0
31 Mar 2026
1
28 Feb 2026
▼ -1 31 Mar 2026 Monthly %MoM Statistics Denmark (DST)/DN
Poland
PLN · Polish Zloty
0
31 Dec 2025
0.06
30 Nov 2025
▼ -0.06 31 Dec 2025 Monthly %MoM ECB/Eurostat

What is Inflation MoM?

Inflation month-over-month measures the sequential change in the headline Consumer Price Index. It captures the immediate price pulse without the smoothing effect of year-over-year comparisons.

Why it matters for FX

Month-over-month CPI is what moves bond yields and FX in the first minute after a CPI release. Annualised, it is the fastest read on whether inflation is converging to or diverging from target — and therefore whether the central bank can ease or must hold.

How to read this page

Annualise by ((1+m)^12 - 1) and compare to the central-bank target. Three-month and six-month annualised run rates filter monthly noise. Watch for one-off energy or shelter components distorting the signal.

What to watch for

  • Annualised three-month run rate vs target
  • Energy and food contributions to the monthly print
  • Shelter / OER lag effects (US)
  • Seasonality and seasonal-adjustment quirks
  • Sequential vs year-over-year divergence