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Beans and other legume varieties (including lentils) - price tags at a grocery store in Granada, Spain.
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Iran War–Driven Gas Spike Pushes March CPI to 3.3% With Largest Monthly Inflation Jump in Nearly Four Years

U.S. consumer prices jumped in March as CPI rose 0.9% month‑over‑month and 3.3% year‑over‑year — the largest monthly gain in nearly four years — largely driven by a sharp gasoline spike tied to the Iran war, with gasoline accounting for roughly three‑quarters of the increase and average pump prices climbing by more than $1 to about $4.15 per gallon (up from $2.98 before the attacks). Core CPI was 2.6% year‑over‑year (about 0.2% m/m), but Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee warned that inflation progress has “stalled” amid business uncertainty — even as March payrolls rose by 178,000 — and economists note the current backdrop differs from the 2021–22 surge because labor market and consumer demand are weaker and there’s no new large stimulus.

U.S. Inflation and Energy Prices Iran War and Global Oil Markets Iran War Economic Fallout Federal Reserve Policy Iran War Economic Impact

📌 Key Facts

  • Headline CPI rose 0.9% month‑over‑month from February to March — the largest monthly increase in nearly four years — pushing year‑over‑year headline inflation to 3.3% in March (up from 2.4% in February).
  • A surge in gasoline prices accounted for nearly three‑quarters of March's month‑over‑month CPI increase; the monthly jump in gas prices was the largest in about six decades.
  • Average national gasoline prices have risen by more than $1 per gallon since the U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran; AAA put the national average at $4.15 per gallon as of Friday, up from $2.98 the day before the Iran war began, and pump prices have remained high despite a tentative ceasefire.
  • Core CPI (excluding food and energy) was 2.6% year‑over‑year in March and rose a modest 0.2% month‑over‑month, indicating underlying inflation is rising but has not yet broadly spilled into other categories.
  • Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said inflation progress has 'stalled out' and is 'inching itself up the other way,' warning the increase could become entrenched.
  • Payrolls grew by 178,000 in March after a prior month of cuts; Goolsbee said business uncertainty from the war is causing firms to 'sit on our hands' rather than hire or fire aggressively.
  • Economists emphasize the current conditions differ from the 2021–22 post‑pandemic inflation surge: the labor market and consumer demand are weaker now and there are no new large stimulus checks bolstering spending.
  • Analysts note March's CPI is the first reading to fully capture the economic effects of the Iran war.

📊 Relevant Data

In 2022, Black or African American households spent an average of 3.59% of their income before taxes on gasoline, other fuels, and motor oil, compared to 3.29% for White, Asian, and all other races (not including Black or African American).

Race of reference person: Annual expenditure means, shares, standard errors, and relative standard errors, Consumer Expenditure Surveys, 2022 — U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Black households face a residential energy expenditure gap of about 1 percentage point higher as a share of income compared to White households at similar income levels.

The Race Gap in Residential Energy Expenditures — University of California, Berkeley

As of 2025, Black or African American service members comprise approximately 17.6% of active-duty U.S. military personnel, compared to 13.6% of the U.S. population.

2025 USAF & USSF Almanac: DOD Personnel — Air & Space Forces Magazine

📰 Source Timeline (3)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

April 10, 2026
1:55 PM
Soaring gas prices leads to biggest monthly inflation spike in four years in March
PBS News by Christopher Rugaber, Associated Press
New information:
  • Confirms March CPI rose 0.9% month-over-month, the largest such increase in nearly four years, explicitly tying it to the largest monthly jump in gas prices in about six decades.
  • Reiterates that headline CPI was 3.3% year-over-year in March, up from 2.4% in February, and that this is the first inflation read to fully capture Iran war effects.
  • Clarifies that core CPI rose 2.6% year-over-year in March, with a modest 0.2% month-over-month gain, suggesting energy price spikes have not yet broadly spilled into other categories.
  • Provides updated average national gasoline price of $4.15 per gallon as of Friday, up from $2.98 the day before the Iran war began, according to AAA.
  • Highlights economists’ view that current conditions differ from the 2021–22 post‑pandemic inflation spike because the labor market and consumer demand are weaker and there are no new large stimulus checks.
1:07 PM
Inflation surges to highest level in nearly two years as energy costs spike
NPR by Scott Horsley
New information:
  • Confirms CPI rose 0.9% month‑over‑month from February to March, with higher gasoline prices accounting for nearly three‑quarters of that increase.
  • Specifies that average gasoline prices have risen by more than $1 a gallon since the U.S. and Israel launched attacks on Iran, and that pump prices have remained high despite a tentative ceasefire.
  • Reports March core inflation at 2.6%, highlighting that underlying inflation is also climbing, not just energy.
  • Includes on‑the‑record comments from Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee that inflation progress has “stalled out” and is now “inching itself up the other way,” raising concern it could become entrenched.
  • Notes March job growth of 178,000 after a prior month of cuts, with Goolsbee saying business uncertainty over the war is leading firms to "sit on our hands" rather than hire or fire aggressively.
12:32 PM
Inflation surged in March as Iran war drove up energy costs
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