The United States Core Producer Price Index (PPI) accelerated sharply in April 2026, rising 5.2% year-over-year, according to data updated on 13 May 2026. This marks a notable pickup from March 2026, when core producer prices were up 3.8% compared with the same month a year earlier.
Core PPI measures the year-over-year change in producer prices excluding the most volatile components and is closely watched as an indicator of underlying inflation pressures at the wholesale level. The latest reading means that producer prices in April 2026 were 5.2% higher than in April 2025, while March’s 3.8% figure reflected the increase from March 2025.
The jump from 3.8% to 5.2% in just one month on a year-over-year basis signals that cost pressures for U.S. producers have intensified, which could eventually feed through to consumer prices if businesses pass higher input costs on to end buyers.