Key Takeaways
- Inflation predictions from prominent forecasters vary widely, with some seeing inflation heating up while others expect it to cool relatively quickly.
- Tariffs are pushing up prices, but housing cost increases are simmering down, reducing a significant source of inflation.
- Estimates for core PCE inflation in 2026 range from 2.2% to 2.8%, compared to the most recent rate of 2.8% in September.
We’re still waiting for consumer price increases to simmer down to the levels we got used to in the pre-pandemic years.
And if 2026 forecasts are correct, we may have to keep waiting.
Prior to 2021, prices as measured by the Personal Consumption Expenditures index excluding food and energy typically rose less than 2% each year. But in 2022, that key inflation measure surged to an annual increase of 5.6%, the highest in nearly four decades.
Economists’ year-ahead forecasts for 2026 vary considerably, but most expect the key inflation measure to remain at least slightly above the Federal Reserve’s target of 2% for at least another year.
Predictions are never easy, and they’re made all the more complicated this year by the economy’s many crosswinds. President Donald Trump’s tariffs have pushed up consumer prices, and no one is certain exactly how long that will last. Another wildcard: Trump’s crackdown on immigration, which could push up wages in industries where a lot of immigrants work, which in turn would potentially push prices higher.
What This Means For The Economy
Inflation levels are a key indicator for the economy, with far-reaching impacts on consumers’ purchasing power, interest rates, business decisions and wages.
As of September, the latest available data show that consumer prices were up 2.8% over the year, as measured by core PCE, excluding the volatile prices of food and energy. Core PCE is the inflation benchmark used by economists and the Federal Reserve.
The median forecast among professional economists surveyed by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia predicts that core PCE prices will rise 2.4% at the end of 2026. In other words, they expect inflation to cool, but not to pre-pandemic levels.
Economists at Deutsche Bank were aligned with the medium forecast. They said they predict lower tariff rates and a slowdown in housing cost increases. However, they expect the economy to remain resilient and for the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates. That will keep inflation running at 2.25% or more through at least 2028, they said.
On the optimistic end of the spectrum, forecasters at Oxford Economics expect core PCE inflation to cool to 2.2% by the end of 2026, getting closer to the Fed’s target. Like most economists, Oxford’s Bernard Yaros said tariffs would push up prices for many things. However, he expects prices for one item to decelerate significantly, and it’s a big one: housing.
Decelerating housing costs, not to mention smaller price hikes for financial services (things like brokerage fees), should push down overall inflation to nearly 2% in 2026, he wrote.
“While this will be welcome news for the central bank, households will be less inclined to cheer this milestone as they are still smarting from the cumulative rise in prices since the pandemic,” Yaros wrote.
Taking the opposite view, Bank of America forecasters expect that core PCE inflation will remain at 2.8% by the end of 2026, the same as it is now.
“Tariffs should continue to trickle through into prices next year, keeping the core PCE above 3% through 3Q,” BofA economists led by Aditya Bhave wrote in a commentary. “We project above-target inflation through end-2027.”
