How inflation will hit your shopping basketpublished at 09:44 BST
Image source, PA MediaThe latest official inflation figures show that the pace of food price rises has eased, particularly for some meats, dairy products and vegetables.
What does that mean for your shopping basket?
In short, it means that overall grocery bills are still increasing, but the pace of price rises may have slowed. Although there are a few bright spots where prices have actually fallen.
We've taken a look at the impact on some staples of the weekly shop:
- Milk, cheese and eggs prices ticked up by 0.4% in May, decelerating from a 2% increase in April
- Bread costs rose by 1% in May, compared to a 2% increase in April
- Pasta and couscous prices rose by 4.1%, compared to a 6.1% increase the month before
- The price of meat rose by 2.3% compared to 3.6% a month earlier - the ONS says that the price of beef and veal (it lumps them both together) rose by 9.3% in May - down from 27% the month before
- Vegetables, including potatoes, rose by 2%, easing from a 3.3% increase in April
- Coffee prices rose by 2.5% in May compared to 6.3% in April
- Low fat milk was cheaper in May, down 0.4% whereas whole milk prices grew by 7.2% - although that was a slowdown from a 10.7% increase in April
- The price of fish rose by 2.1% in May compared to 5.7% in April










