Mencari News (Australia)
The Flashwire
Australia's Inflation Surges to 3.8% as Housing, Food Costs Climb
0:00
-4:44

Australia's Inflation Surges to 3.8% as Housing, Food Costs Climb

mencari news


This piece is freely available to read. Become a paid subscriber today and help keep Mencari News financially afloat so that we can continue to pay our writers for their insight and expertise.

Upgrade to Paid


Australia’s Consumer Price Index rose 3.8 percent in the year to December 2025, up from 3.4 percent in November, marking a significant acceleration in inflation pressures across the economy, according to data released Tuesday by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

Housing costs drove the annual increase, rising 5.5 percent and representing the largest contributor to inflation. Within that category, electricity prices surged 21.5 percent over the 12 months, primarily reflecting the depletion of state government rebates in Queensland and Western Australia that had previously cushioned household bills.

“The 3.8 percent annual CPI inflation to December was up from 3.4 percent to November,” said Michelle Marquardt, ABS head of prices statistics.

Food and non-alcoholic beverages rose 3.4 percent annually, with beef and lamb prices each climbing more than 10 percent due to strong overseas demand for Australian red meat. Weather-related shortages pushed vegetable prices up 3.8 percent, while reduced apple supply contributed to a 4.2 percent increase in fruit costs.

Recreation and culture inflation reached 4.4 percent, propelled by domestic holiday travel and accommodation prices that jumped 9.6 percent annually. December saw an 8.2 percent monthly spike in travel costs driven by Christmas demand, school holidays and major events including the Ashes cricket series.

Rental inflation showed modest easing to 3.9 percent from 4 percent, attributed to stable vacancy rates in most capital cities. The Trimmed mean measure of underlying inflation rose to 3.3 percent from 3.2 percent in November.

Leave a comment


Follow us across all major podcasting platforms and social media channels for updates that matter. Your support keeps independent journalism alive!

For more in-depth coverage on these stories and other news affecting Australia and the world, subscribe to readmencari.com. Support our independent journalism by listening to our podcasts on all major platforms and considering a subscription to help us continue delivering fearless reporting free from financial and political influence.


Got a News Tip?

Contact our editor via Proton Mail encrypted, X Direct Message, LinkedIn, or email. You can securely message him on Signal by using his username, Miko Santos.


The Mencari readers receive journalism free of financial and political influence.

We set our own news agenda, which is always based on facts rather than billionaire ownership or political pressure.

Despite the financial challenges that our industry faces, we have decided to keep our reporting open to the public because we believe that everyone has the right to know the truth about the events that shape their world.

Thanks to the unwavering support of our readers, we’re able to keep the news flowing freely. If you’re able, please join us in supporting Mencari.

Join over 1000 readers. Sign up here.

We’d love it if you could share the email with your friends! Just (copy the URL here.

Discussion about this episode

User's avatar

Ready for more?