Inflation isn’t letting up for Elizabeth Martin.

“Everything still feels high, that’s what is on the top of my mind right now,” said Martin, a product designer from Oakland, California. “My water bill is higher than a year ago. My electricity bill is costly, too. I’m spending over $100 a month more on both. So, I don’t see a difference.” 

Many Americans express a similar sentiment even though annual inflation in the U.S. slowed to 3% last month, according to the June Consumer Price Index released Wednesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Inflation, as measured by the CPI, has now eased for 12 straight months and is at its lowest rate since March 2021.

That’s a significant decline from a year ago, when inflation hit a 40-year high of 9.1%. But it’s apparently still not enough for many consumers after a historic two-year price run-up.

Inflation is still on America’s mind . . . and for many, it’s not because prices are getting more manageable.

“I haven’t seen that at all,” said Dot Stagner as she rolled her full grocery cart outside a supermarket in Morgan Hill, California.

A ‘turning point’ on inflation?

Still, many Americans are relatively optimistic about the economy and inflation, said John Leer, chief economist of Morning Consult, a research firm that surveys consumers on their views of the economy.