March inflation in the United States accelerated to 3.3% in March 2026 as fuel costs surged sharply. Gasoline prices drove most of the monthly increase, while core inflation remained moderate. The data showed rising pressure from energy markets, even as underlying price trends stayed relatively stable across many consumer categories nationwide.
The US Consumer Price Index rose 0.9% in March after a 0.3% increase in February. It was the largest monthly gain since June 2022, according to Labor Department data.

Annual inflation climbed to 3.3% in March from 2.4% in February. Economists surveyed by Reuters had expected a 0.9% monthly rise and a 3.3% yearly increase.
Energy prices were the main source of the increase. Gasoline prices jumped 21.2% in March and accounted for nearly three quarters of the monthly rise in CPI.
Other motor fuels, including diesel, rose 30.8%. The report said this was the largest increase since the government began tracking that series.
Reuters reported that global crude prices rose more than 30% during the Middle East conflict. The national average gasoline price also moved above $4 per gallon.
Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at FWDBONDS, said, “The economy has just taken a direct inflation hit as a result of the war in the Middle East.”
Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, rose 0.2% in March. It matched the increase recorded in February and came in below the broader monthly CPI rise.
On a yearly basis, core CPI increased 2.6% after rising 2.5% in February. The reading showed that underlying inflation remained more stable than headline inflation.
Shelter prices rose 0.3% in March and continued to add pressure. Food prices were unchanged after increasing 0.4% in February.
The report also showed mixed movements in other categories. Rents, airline fares, apparel, and household furnishings increased, while used car and truck prices declined.
Economists said the moderate core reading may reflect only the early stage of the energy shock. They expect higher fuel costs to move into other prices in the coming months.
Reuters said higher jet fuel could raise airline fares, while higher diesel costs could raise transport costs. Fertilizer and plastics were also seen as areas facing price pressure.
The March CPI report arrived after strong job growth data. That combination suggested that the labor market remained stable even as inflation moved higher.
Some economists now expect the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates unchanged this year. Others still see a possible rate cut if consumer spending weakens.
Minutes from the Fed’s March 17-18 meeting showed that some policymakers believed rate hikes might still be needed. The central bank left its benchmark rate in the 3.50% to 3.75% range.
Markets reacted quickly after the release. Stocks on Wall Street moved higher, the dollar fell against a basket of currencies, and Treasury yields rose.
The report showed that March CPI inflation rose to 3.3% as energy shock offset core stability. That left households facing higher fuel costs, while broader price trends stayed more contained for now.
The post US March CPI Hits 3.3% As Fuel Surge Outweighs Moderate Core Inflation Pace appeared first on CoinCentral.


