Parents and students got rare relief in September as the cost of certificate and vocational courses eased, even as Kenyaโs inflation edged higher to 4.6%.
The relief wasnโt confined to classrooms. Households also enjoyed lower prices on key staples. A kilo ofย loose maize grainย slid 3.9% to Sh 68.14, while a two-kilo packet ofย sifted maize flourย dropped 3.0% to Sh152.28. Sukuma wiki, spinach, sugar, milk and wheat flour also registered price dips, offering a cushion against rising living costs.
Personal care and household goods also showed small declines.ย Infant diapersย were down 0.3%,ย hair dryerstumbled 2.3%, and in the tech basket,ย computers and tabletsย fell 0.6% whileย woofers and speakersย edged down 0.1%.
But the overall picture was less rosy. Fruits such as oranges and mangoes, vegetables like cabbages and tomatoes, and utilities including electricity and rent all went up, keeping inflation within striking distance of consumersโ daily budgets.
In September 2025 ,the price of charcoal rose by 3.4%, while the price of electricityย (200kWh) increased by 1.0%. The house rent for a single room also edged up slightlyย 0.5%ย by 0.2%. On the other hand, the price of gas/LPG declined by 0.2%, and the price of kerosene/paraffin dropped by 0.5%ย
โThe September data is a reminder that inflation is uneven โ households may pay less for flour or courses, but they are still squeezed on food, rent and power,โ said one Nairobi-based analyst.
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