Kenya's inflation rate rises to 4.5 per cent in August

Business
By Ronald Kipruto | Aug 29, 2025

Traders going about with their business at Soko Mjinga Market in Nyeri. [Kibata Kihu, Standard]

Kenya's inflation rate rose to 4.5 percent in August, up from 4.1 percent in July, driven mainly by higher food, transport, and alcohol prices, according to the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS).

KNBS' August report shows food and non-alcoholic beverages rose 8.3 percent year-on-year, transport increased 4.4 percent, and housing, water, electricity, gas, and other fuels climbed 0.8 percent.

The Consumer Price Index rose from 145.74 in July to 146.21 in August, reflecting a monthly inflation rate of 0.3 percent.

Data also shows the cost of food and non-alcoholic beverages rose 8.3 percent in the 12 months to August.

In transport, petrol prices dropped 0.5 percent during the month, while diesel prices were unchanged. Still, transport costs rose 4.4 percent compared with August 2024.

In housing and utilities, electricity charges fell, with 50kWh band prices down 2.3 percent and 200kWh down 2.1 percent.

Kerosene prices also dropped by 0.6 percent. However, single-room rents rose 0.1 percent, and LPG gas prices increased 0.4 percent.

However, alcoholic beverages, tobacco, and narcotics recorded mixed shifts. Beer prices fell 0.1 percent, spirits rose 0.5 percent, and miraa posted the sharpest increase, up 1.6 percent month-on-month and 3.4 percent year-on-year.

Clothing and footwear rose 0.1 percent in August and 3.3 percent over 12 months. Health services increased 0.1 percent for the month and 3.3 percent annually.

In education, diploma fees fell 0.2 percent while private secondary school tuition climbed 0.8 percent. Overall, education costs rose 2.4 percent year-on-year.

Electricity, Transport Costs

Between July and August, electricity costs dropped from Sh1, 288.82 to Sh1,259.65 for 50kWh and from Sh5,656.22 to Sh5,539.54 for 200kWh.

Petrol prices declined slightly, from Sh187.37 to Sh186.37 per litre.

At the same time, transport costs rose sharply, with bus fares on the Mombasa- Nairobi route increasing from Sh1,300 to Sh1,500.

Share this story
Of demand and supply: Why affordable housing uptake has slowed down
The lack of a pool of potential homebuyers from which the market can draw whenever units are ready is the biggest setback derailing affordable housing delivery in the country. 
New policy fails to deliver tax predictability, expand tax base
Businesses and households are still struggling with an unpredictable tax regime that is also heavily reliant on a small pool of taxpayers, three years after implementation of National Tax Policy. 
Why investing in real estate over paper wealth makes sense
Joseph Ng'ang'a has an interest in real estate because he's assured the investment will appreciate over time, rather than spreading the risks in the stock and money markets, where stocks can crash.
New solutions seal energy access gaps for homes
More than 600 million people in the world have no access to electricity today, with Sub-Saharan Africa bearing the largest share of the energy gap. 
State rallies support for Sacco reforms
Cooperatives and MSMEs Development Cabinet Secretary Wycliff Oparanya has intensified his quest to institute radical reforms in the country’s cooperative movement. 
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS