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Inflation unchanged at 1.7% in May as rental price growth slowed

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Canada's inflation rate came in at 1.7 per cent in May, unchanged from the previous month, Statistics Canada said on Tuesday.

Bank of Canada's preferred measures of core inflation ticked down slightly

The Canadian Press

· Posted: Jun 24, 2025 8:38 AM EDT | Last Updated: 2 hours ago

two people walk in front of an apartment building

Rental units are pictured in Toronto on Jan. 12, 2024. The annual pace of inflation held steady at 1.7 per cent in May as cooling shelter costs helped tame price pressures, Statistics Canada said on Tuesday. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The annual pace of inflation held steady at 1.7 per cent in May as cooling shelter costs helped tame price pressures, Statistics Canada said on Tuesday.

Shelter costs rose three per cent in May, StatsCan said, marking a slowdown from 3.4 per cent in April.

The agency singled out Ontario as the major source of rent relief in the country. Slowing population growth and a jump in new supply helped dampen rent hikes in May.

Mortgage interest costs, meanwhile, decelerated for the 21st consecutive month amid lower interest rates from the Bank of Canada.

Economists had broadly expected inflation would remain unchanged heading into Tuesday.

Core measures ticked down slightly

The removal of the consumer carbon price continues to drive down gasoline costs annually, StatsCan said, but a smaller monthly decline in prices at the pump from this time last year limited the drop.

The cost of food from the grocery store rose 3.3 per cent annually in May, half a percentage point lower than the hike seen in April.

Lower prices on travel tours and air transportation also dampened inflation last month.

StatsCan says the cost of a new vehicle accelerated in May, rising 4.9 per cent annually, thanks in large part to more expensive electric vehicles.

Inflation excluding tax changes — stripping out influences from the carbon price removal — was also steady at 2.3 per cent last month.

Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said last week that the central bank would be paying closer attention to this figure as it tries to look past temporary impacts to see what's really happening to inflation amid tariffs.

The central bank's closely watched core inflation metrics ticked down a tenth of a percentage point to three per cent in May.

"The latest inflation results are broadly similar to April's outing — a deceptively calm headline number with core hovering too far above the 2 per cent target for comfort," wrote Douglas Porter, chief economist at BMO.

"The [Bank of Canada] will likely need to see much more improvement before it's convinced that underlying inflation is headed back to 2 per cent."

The Bank of Canada's next interest rate decision is set for July 30.

With files from CBC's Jenna Benchetrit

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