Colombia's 2025 inflation closes at 5.1%, below projections

Following projections of around 5.2% for year-end 2025, Colombia's National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) reported actual annual inflation of 5.1% for December 2025, down 10 basis points from December 2024. This below-expectation figure underscores persistent pressures in housing, services, and food amid minimum wage hikes, as the central bank eyes interest rate moves.

The Dane announced the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for December 2025 at 5.1% year-over-year, versus 5.2% in December 2024 and below Citi's November survey of 5.19%. This marks a modest disinflation slowdown from earlier months, with the annual low at 4.82% in June.

Key drivers included restaurants and hotels (7.91%), education (7.36%), health (7.2%), alcoholic beverages and tobacco (6.37%), and transport (5.35%). Housing and services contributed 1.48 percentage points, led by rents, while electricity eased. Non-alcoholic food and beverages added 0.95 points, and restaurants/hotels 0.87. Monthly CPI rose 0.27%, driven by holiday-related transport and dining.

City variations: Bucaramanga (5.78%), Pereira (5.77%), Bogotá (5.41%); lowest in Valledupar (3.49%), Santa Marta (3.64%), Montería (3.92%).

Still above the Banco de la República's 3% target—and extending misses projected for a sixth year—this fuels expectations of 50-75 basis point rate hikes in January 2026, amid a 23.7% minimum wage rise. Corficolombiana's César Pabón cautioned: "With minimum wage impacts, 2026 outlook worsens; expect 50 bps hikes, possibly 75 bps." December 2026 forecasts average 4.64%, with 3% target eyed by 2030.

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Illustration of Colombia's central bank building with digital overlays depicting a potential 50 basis point interest rate hike to 9.75% amid 5.15% inflation concerns.
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Central bank may raise interest rates by 50 basis points

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Colombia's central bank may hike its policy rate by 50 basis points to 9.75% at its January 30 meeting, according to analysts surveyed by Anif and Corficolombiana. The move would address 2025 inflation of 5.15% and a 23% minimum wage increase that has boosted inflation expectations. The global context, with steady Fed rates and Brazil's policy, shapes the local outlook.

Colombia's inflation is projected at 4.9% for 2026, missing the Banco de la República's target range for the sixth consecutive year. A Corficolombiana report estimates it will close 2025 at 5.2%, roughly the same as last year, signaling a stall in disinflation. The goal of nearing 3% is now delayed until 2027.

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One week after President Gustavo Petro decreed a 23% minimum wage increase for 2026—setting it at 1,750,905 pesos based on ILO 'minimum vital' standards for a three-person family—experts warn of inflation exceeding 6%, interest rates rising to 11-12%, and price hikes across sectors, potentially eroding informal workers' purchasing power.

Analysts agree that the Banco de la República's Board will keep the interest rate at 9.25% in its October 31, 2025 meeting. This stems from persistent inflation and fiscal risks, despite the recent US Federal Reserve rate cut. Annual inflation hit 5.18% in September, above the 3% target.

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Following initial government signals of a 12%+ increase, Colombia's labor unions and pensioners have submitted reservations to the proposed 16% rise for the 2026 minimum wage. Unions demand exceeding inflation to cover family basket costs, citing constitutional and ILO backing, while businesses warn of job losses, higher costs, and political motivations.

The Central Agency for Public Mobilisation and Statistics announced that Egypt's annual urban inflation rate stabilized at 12.3% in December 2025, unchanged from November. Month-on-month inflation eased to 0.2%, signaling ongoing slowdown in price pressures. Declines in food prices primarily drove this stability.

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The Autonomous Fiscal Rule Committee (Carf) warns that the recent 23% minimum wage hike to $2 million—decreed on December 30—could cost $5.3 trillion in 2026 (0.3% of GDP), complicating fiscal sustainability. Labor Minister Antonio Sanguino announced plans to desindex key goods from the wage and provide SME relief to curb inflation.

 

 

 

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