Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Inflation eases to 1.6% in Saudi Arabia

Passengers board a bus in Riyadh. Saudi transport costs fell 1.8 percent year on year Alamy via Reuters
Passengers board a bus in Riyadh. Saudi transport costs fell 1.8 percent year on year
  • Price rises lower in March
  • Housing costs up 8.8 percent
  • Subsidies help reduce food prices

Inflation in Saudi Arabia fell to 1.6 percent in March, from 1.8 percent in February, driven mainly by housing rents.

The trend of lower price rises over the past year continued. 

The consumer price index hit a high of 2.8 percent year-on-year inflation in May 2023 but has been under 2 percent since September. 

The March figure was a result of cost decreases of 1.8 percent for transportation costs and 1.1 percent for personal goods and services, the General Authority for Statistics said in its monthly report. 



There was an 8.8 percent increase in prices of housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels and a 0.9 percent increase in prices of food and beverages, it said. 

Increases in the Saudi government’s wholesale price index have mirrored the CPI fall over the past year, rising from a low of -1.3 in June to 3.8 percent in March.

These were provoked by a 25.2 percent rise in the price of basic chemicals and a 12 percent increase in refined petroleum products. The index hit a high of 4.3 percent in January. 

Government subsidies baked into food and petrol prices tend to lower price inflation in the wholesale index, but businesses had been reluctant to pass on higher costs over the past year as the Saudi economy slowed. 

Inflation has remained relatively low in Saudi Arabia compared with global levels, and effective subsidies in food and petrol limit the impact of international price increases. The impact of Red Sea shipping disruptions has so far been small. 



Oil production cuts hit the Saudi economy last year, leading to a GDP contraction of 0.8 percent in 2023. 

Riyad Bank, which publishes the Saudi Purchasing Managers’ Index with S&P Global, said in its latest report that business activity rose sharply in the first quarter with growth in sales and recruitment and an easing of input cost pressures, including wages. 

Latest articles

An extension of Diriyah's Bujairi Terrace, a popular nightspot, will open in November

Diriyah giga-project to open first hotel in November

Diriyah, one of Saudi Arabia’s leading giga-projects, will finally open its first hotel in November along with other attractions and sites, its CEO said this week.  “This November we’ll open another few kilometres of parks, we’ll open our first Bab Samhan hotel, we’ll open our first museum which is the Diriyah Art Futures Museum, we’ll […]

King Abdulaziz International Airport: the number of international flights increased but there were less than 27.4 million international visitors to the kingdom last year

Passenger numbers rise 26% in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia said this week that its total number of air passengers rose 26 percent to 112 million in 2023. This includes a 46 percent rise in the total number of international travellers to 61 million.  The number means the kingdom’s airports are approaching full capacity, which is 116 million passengers a year, including 45 […]

Oil workers in Venezuela, a founder member of Opec. The IEA predicts slower demand growth

IEA and Opec move further apart on global oil demand

The division between the International Energy Agency and oil producers’ group Opec has deepened as the Paris-based energy watchdog once again curtailed its oil demand outlook for 2024, amid softer macro sentiment. In its monthly report, the IEA forecast on Wednesday that world fuel demand will grow by 1.1 million barrels per day (bpd) this […]

Tourists visit the tombs of the Nabatean civilisation in AlUla. Saudi Arabia's goal is for tourism to make up 10 percent of GDP by 2030

Affluent tourists around the globe on Saudi Arabia’s radar

Saudi Arabia will invest more than $800 billion in its main giga-projects by the next decade as part of a tourism expansion strategy focused on affluent tourists in China, India and Europe.  The kingdom’s tourism minister Ahmed Al-Khateeb, speaking at the Qatar Investment Forum, said: “We’re building and investing in major destinations like Neom, Red […]