According to Eurostat data released today, the harmonized inflation rate in Greece stood at 3% in February, slightly down from 3.1% in January.

Across the eurozone, annual inflation fell to 2.3% in February 2025 from 2.5% in January, compared to 2.6% recorded a year earlier. Meanwhile, inflation in the European Union reached 2.7% in February, down from 2.8% in January, and from 2.8% a year earlier.

The lowest annual inflation rates were recorded in France (0.9%), Ireland (1.4%), and Finland (1.5%). On the other hand, the highest rates were observed in Hungary (5.7%), Romania (5.2%), and Estonia (5.1%).

Compared to January 2025, inflation declined in 14 EU member states, remained stable in six, and increased in seven.

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In February 2025, the services sector contributed the most to Eurozone inflation (+1.66 percentage points), followed by food, alcohol, and tobacco (+0.52 pp), non-energy industrial goods (+0.14 pp), and energy (+0.01 pp).

Data from the Hellenic Statistical Authority (ELSTAT) showed that inflation in Greece stood at 2.5% in February, down from 2.7% in January and 2.9% in February 2024.

Key price increases include hotels (+17.5%), air travel (+10.8%), rent (+9.9%), health insurance (+7%), clothing and footwear (+6.4%),
natural gas (+4.1%), and electricity (+6.7%).

Food inflation remained low at 0.2%, with olive oil prices falling 16.9%, while other oils rose 11%. Increases were also noted in beef (+6.7%), nuts (+5.7%), and coffee (+4.7%).

The 12-month average consumer price index (CPI) from March 2024 to February 2025 rose 2.7%, compared to a 2.9% increase recorded in the previous 12-month period.