Inflation stuck at 3.3% — and energy is (again) to blame
Prices in Portugal keep rising 3.3% a year, dragged up by a 13% jump in energy tied to Middle East tensions.
If your money feels like it stretches less than a year ago, it’s not your imagination. Inflation in Portugal held at 3.3% in May, one of the highest readings since 2023 — and the main culprit is, once again, energy.
Energy costs jumped about 13% over the year, pushed up by Middle East tensions and the scares around the Strait of Hormuz, through which much of the world’s oil passes. When the barrel rises abroad, the bill lands at home — first at the pump, then on nearly everything else, because moving goods costs more too.
What to expect
The good news is that forecasts point to a cooldown: economists expect annual inflation near 3% in 2026, easing to 2.3% in 2027. In other words, prices are still rising, just more slowly.
For daily life, the takeaway is simple. It’s worth comparing electricity and gas tariffs, because that’s where the biggest pressure sits. And savers feel the bite: with inflation above 3%, money sitting idle in the bank loses real value every month.
It’s no cause for panic — the economy is still growing and unemployment is low — but it’s a reminder that energy, far away, still rules the household budget here.
Illustrative · Photo: Pixabay / Pexels