In June 2025, the United States saw its annual core consumer price inflation rate, which excludes the more unpredictable food and energy sectors, inch upwards to 2.9% from a previous four-year low of 2.8%. This figure narrowly missed market projections, which anticipated a rate of 3%. The shelter index experienced a 3.8% rise over the past year, slightly lower than the 3.9% increase observed in May. Other notable annual increases were noted in sectors such as medical care, which rose by 2.8%, motor vehicle insurance surging by 6.1%, household furnishings and operations climbing by 3.3%, and recreation increasing by 2.1%. On a monthly scale, core consumer prices increased by 0.2%, compared to a 0.1% rise in May and falling short of the expected 0.3% increase.