Kenya's year-on-year inflation rate slowed to 6.84 percent in February from 7.78 percent in the previous month, the statistics office said on Monday.
February's rate is the lowest since October last year, when it stood to 6.72 percent, the statistics office said.
It added the fall was driven by a -0.43 percent monthly drop in the prices of food, which has the biggest weighting in the basket of goods used to measure inflation.
"This resulted from notable decreases in prices of key food items which slightly outweighed the increases," the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement.
READ MORE
Families feel the pinch as war-hit diaspora remittances shrink
Unbothered: Top officials bury their heads in the sand as high fuel costs spark anger
Fuel price hike pushes up cost of basic goods
Kenya's trade deficit widens to Sh1.6tr on raised maize imports
Prices of housing and transport also came down on a monthly basis, the bureau said.
The governor of the central bank Patrick Njoroge told Reuters in December he expected inflation to be contained within the government's preferred band of 2.5-7.5 percent.