
New stats show food prices rose 4.6% in the year to June 鈥 the largest rate of increase since late 2023.
That was up from a 4.4% increase in the year to May, Stats NZ鈥檚 latest Selected Price Indexes show.
Rising prices for fruit and vegetables in June have added to already elevated pricing for dairy products to push costs higher.
Higher prices for the fruit and vegetables group and the grocery foods group drove the increase in food prices for June 2025, Stats NZ said.
They were up 5% and 0.8% respectively.
鈥淢ore expensive tomatoes, capsicum, and broccoli drove the increase for fruit and vegetables, while higher prices for boxed chocolates and eggs drove the increase for grocery foods,鈥 Stats NZ said.
Meanwhile, dairy and meat prices remain elevated, reflecting strong export prices on global markets.
鈥淒airy products continue to drive the higher cost in food prices,鈥 said prices and deflators spokeswoman Nicola Growden.
The average milk price was $4.57 for 2 litres, up 14.3% annually. Butter was $8.60 per 500g, up 46.5% annually, and cheese was $13.04 for a 1kg block, up 30% annually.
鈥淏utter prices are nearly five dollars more expensive than 10 years ago, an increase of over 120%,鈥 Growden said.
The increase in the meat, poultry, and fish group was driven by higher prices for beef steak and beef mince, up 22.3% and 15.6%, respectively.
鈥淭he average cost for 1kg of beef mince was $21.73 in June 2025, up from $18.80 a year ago,鈥 Growden said.
Meanwhile, rental prices continue to moderate.
Rent prices increased 2.6% in the 12 months to June 2025, following a 2.8% rise in the year to May.
The 2.6% increase is the lowest lift for rent prices since October 2011, when they rose 2.5%, Stats NZ said.
On a monthly basis, rents were flat, rising just 0.1%.
Full consumers price index inflation data is due on Monday.
Elevated inflation concerns prompted the Reserve Bank to pause its cycle of interest rate cuts last week.
Liam Dann is business editor-at-large for the New Zealand Herald. He is a senior writer and columnist, and also presents and produces videos and podcasts. He joined the Herald in 2003.
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