Petflation 2023 – June Update: Again below double digits, +9.6% vs 2022

Inflation is no longer a “headline” but it is still news. The YOY increases in the monthly Consumer Price Index (CPI) that were larger than we have seen in decades are definitely slowing. June prices grew 0.3% from May and the CPI was still +3.0% vs 2022, but down from +4.0% last month. The grocery pricing surge has also slowed. After 12 straight months of double-digit YOY monthly percentage increases, grocery inflation is down to +4.7%, with 4 consecutive months below 10%. As we have seen in recent years, even minor price changes can affect consumer pet spending, especially in the discretionary pet segments, so we will continue to publish monthly reports to track petflation as it evolves in the market.

Total Petflation was +4.1% in December 2021 while the overall CPI was +7.0%. The gap narrowed as Petflation accelerated and reached 96.7% of the national rate in June 2022. National inflation has slowed since July, but Petflation has generally increased. It passed the National CPI in July 2022 and is now +9.6% in June, more than 3 times the national rate of 3.0%. We will look deeper into the numbers. This and future reports will include:

  • A rolling 24 month tracking of the CPI for all pet segments and the national CPI. The base number will be pre-pandemic December 2019 in this and future reports, which will facilitate comparisons.
  • Monthly comparisons of 23 vs 22 which will include Pet Segments and relevant Human spending categories. Plus
    1. CPI change from the previous month.
    2. Inflation changes for recent years (21>22, 20>21, 19>20, 18>19)
    3. Total Inflation for the current month in 2023 vs 2019 and now vs 2021 to see the full inflation surge.
    4. Average annual Year Over Year inflation rate from 2019 to 2023
  • YTD comparisons
    1. YTD numbers for the monthly comparisons #2>4 above

In our first graph we will track the monthly change in prices for the 24 months from June 2021 to June 2023. We will use December 2019 as a base number so we can track the progress from pre-pandemic times through an eventual recovery. Inflation is a complex issue. This chart is designed to give you a visual image of the flow of pricing. You can see the similarities and differences in patterns between segments and compare them to the overall U.S. CPI. The current numbers plus yearend and those from 12 and 24 months earlier are included. This will give you some key waypoints. In June, Pet Products prices are down from May, but they increased in both Service segments.

In June 2021, the national CPI was +5.7% and Pet prices were +2.1%. Veterinary and Services prices generally inflated after mid-2020, similar to the overall CPI while Food and Supplies prices generally deflated until late 2021. After that time, Petflation took off. Pet Food prices consistently increased but the other segments had mixed patterns until July 2022, when all increased. In Aug>Oct Petflation accelerated. In Nov>Dec, Services & Food prices continued to grow while Veterinary & Supplies prices stabilized. In Jan>June, prices grew every month except for 2 dips by Supplies, 1 dip for the other segments and a June dip by Total Pet. Cumulative Petflation from Dec 2019 has been above the U.S. CPI since November 2022.

  • U.S. CPI – The inflation rate was below 2% through 2020. It turned up in January 2021 and continued to grow until flattening out in Jul>Dec 2022. Prices turned up again in Jan>Jun but 36% of the overall 18.7% increase in the 42 months since December 2019 happened in the 6 months from January>June 2022 – 14% of the time.
  • Pet Food – Prices stayed generally below Dec 2019 levels from Apr 20 > Sep 21, when they turned up. There was a sharp lift in Dec 2021, and it continued until the dip in June. 93% of the 23.1% increase has occurred since 2022.
  • Pet Supplies – Supplies prices were high in December 2019 due to the added tariffs. They then had a “deflated” roller coaster ride until mid-2021 when they returned to December 2019 prices and essentially stayed there until 2022. They turned up in January and hit an all-time high, beating the 2009 record. They plateaued from Feb> May, turned up in June, flattened in July, then turned up in Aug>Oct setting a new record. Prices stabilized in Nov>Dec but turned up in Jan>Feb, another new record. They fell in March, set a record in May, then fell in June.
  • Pet Services– Normally inflation is 2+%. Perhaps due to closures, prices increased at a lower rate in 2020. In 2021 consumer demand increased but there were fewer outlets. Inflation grew in 2021 with the biggest lift in Jan>Apr. Inflation was stronger in 2022 but it got on a rollercoaster in Mar>June. It turned up again July>Mar but the increase slowed to +0.1% in April. Prices fell -0.3% in May then turned up slightly in June, +0.04%.
  • Veterinary – Inflation has been pretty consistent in Veterinary. Prices turned up in March 2020 and grew through 2021. A pricing surge began in December 2021 which put them above the overall CPI. In May 2022 prices fell and stabilized in June causing them to briefly fall below the National CPI. However, prices turned up again and despite Oct & Dec dips they have stayed above the National CPI since July. In 2023 prices grew except for a dip in May.
  • Total Pet – The blending of patterns made Total Pet appear calm. In December 2021 the pricing surge began. In Mar>June 2022 the segments had ups & downs, but Petflation grew again from Jul>Nov. It slowed in December, turned up Jan>May, then fell in June. Except for 5 individual monthly dips, including 2 in June, prices in all segments have increased monthly in 2023. It has been ahead of the cumulative U.S. CPI since November 2022.

Next, we’ll turn our attention to the Year over Year inflation rate change for June and compare it to last month, last year and to previous years. We will also show total inflation from 21>23 & 19>23. Petflation dropped below double digits to 9.6% in June but is now over 3 times the National rate. The chart will allow you to compare the inflation rates of 22>23 to 21>22 and other years but also see how much of the total inflation since 2019 came from the current pricing surge. Again, we’ve included some human categories to put the pet numbers into perspective.

  • U.S. CPI– Prices are +0.3% from May. The YOY increase is down to +3.0%. It peaked at +9.1% back in June 2022. The targeted inflation rate is <2% so we are still 50% higher than the target. However, a 12th straight slight decline is good news. It is also good that the current inflation rate is below 21>22 but the 21>23 rate is still 12.3%, 64% of total inflation since 2019. How many households “broke even” by increasing their income by 12% in 2 years?
  • Pet Food– Prices are -0.2% vs May and +12.1% vs June 2022. They are also 2.5 times the Food at Home inflation rate – not good news! The YOY increase of 12.1% is being measured against a time when prices were 9.8% above the 2019 level, but that increase is still an incredible 4.3 times the pre-pandemic 2.8% increase from 2018 to 2019. The 2021>2023 inflation surge generated 99% of the total 23.9% inflation since 2019.
  • Food at Home – Prices are down -0.1% from May. The monthly YOY increase is 4.7%, down from 5.8% in May and considerably lower than Jul>Sep 2022 when it exceeded 13%. The 25.2% Inflation for this category since 2019 is 32% more than the national CPI and remains 2nd to Veterinary. 69% of the inflation since 2019 occurred from 2021>2023. The pattern mirrors the national CPI, but we should note that Grocery prices began inflating in 2020>2021 then the rate accelerated. It appears that the pandemic supply chain issues in Food which contributed to higher prices started early and foreshadowed problems in other categories and the overall CPI tsunami.
  • Pets & Supplies– Prices fell -0.5% from May, and they still have the lowest increase since 2019. They also fell again to last place in terms of the monthly increase vs last year for Pet Segments. As we noted earlier, prices deflated in 2020>2021 so the 2021>2023 inflation surge accounted for 100+% of the total price increase since 2019. They reached an all-time high in October then prices deflated. 3 straight months of increases pushed them to a new record high in February. Prices fell in March, bounced back in Apr>May to a new record high then fell in June.
  • Veterinary Services – Prices are up 0.6% from They are +11.4% from 2022 and remain in 2nd place behind Food in the Pet Industry. However, they are still the leader in the increase since 2019 with 30.2% compared to Food at home at 25.2%. For Veterinary Services, relatively high annual inflation is the norm. The rate did increase during the current surge so 64% of the 4 years’ worth of inflation occurred in the 2 years from 2021>2023.
  • Medical Services – Prices turned sharply up at the start of the pandemic but then inflation slowed and fell to a low rate in 20>21. In May prices fell -0.04% from May and are -0.8% vs 2022, the only 22>23 deflation in any category. Medical Services are not a big part of the current surge as only 35% of the 2019>23 increase happened from 21>23.
  • Pet Services – Inflation slowed in 2020 but began to grow in 2021/2022. June 23 prices were up +0.04% from May and +6.3% vs 2022, which is up from 5.6% last month but much lower than 8.0% in March. Initially their inflation was tied to the current surge, but it may be becoming the norm as only 61% of the total since 2019 occurred from 21>23.
  • Haircuts/Other Personal Services – Prices are +0.4% from May and +5.0% from 2022, the 2nd highest rate since 2019. However, inflation has been rather consistent so just 54% of the inflation from 19>23 happened from 21>23.
  • Total Pet– Petflation is only 9% higher than the 21>22 rate, but 3 times the National CPI and +9.6% is the highest June rate in history. Vs May, Product Prices fell while Services increased so Total Pet fell -0.2%. Note: A May>June decrease has happened in 13 of the last 26 years so it is not that unusual. Food & Veterinary are still the Petflation leaders and have the biggest increases over the 21>22 rate. Pet Food has generally been immune to inflation as Pet Parents are used to paying a lot. However, inflation can cause reduced purchase frequency in the other segments.

Now, let’s look at the YTD numbers

The increase from 2022 to 2023 is the biggest for 4 of 9 categories – All Pet. The 22>23 rate for Haircuts is slightly below 21>22. However, the Total CPI, Pet Supplies, Medical Services and Food at Home are significantly down from 21>22. The average annual increase since 2019 is 4.4% or more for all but Medical Services (3.0%) and Pet Supplies (2.7%).

  • U.S. CPI – The current increase is down 41% from 21>22 but is still 11% more than the average increase from 2019>2023, and 2.3 times the average annual increase from 2018>2021. 72% of the 18.9% inflation since 2019 occurred from 2021>23. Inflation is a big problem that started recently.
  • Pet Food – Strong inflation continues with the highest 22>23 & 21>23 rates on the chart. Deflation in the 1st half of 2021 kept YTD prices low then prices surged in 2022. 94.3% of the inflation since 2019 occurred from 2021>23.
  • Food at Home – The 2023 YTD inflation rate has slowed slightly but still beat the U.S. CPI by 61%. You can see the impact of supply chain issues on the Grocery category as 76% of the inflation since 2019 occurred from 2021>23.
  • Pets & Pet Supplies – The inflation rate is down slightly at 5.2% as prices fell in June. Prices deflated significantly in 2021 which helped to create a very unique situation. Prices are up 11.3% from 2019 but 115% of this increase happened from 2021>23. Prices are up 13.0% from their 2021 “bottom”.
  • Veterinary Services – They held onto the top spot in inflation since 2019 but they have only the 4th highest rate since 2021. At +6.4%, they have the highest average annual inflation rate since 2019 but Veterinary is unique. They are the only category in which the inflation rate grew steadily every year from 2019>2023. Throughout the pandemic and recovery, no matter what, just charge more.
  • Medical Services – Prices went up significantly at the beginning of the pandemic, but inflation slowed in 2021. In 2023 prices have been deflating and are now at a rate actually 64% below the pre-pandemic 2018>19 rate.
  • Pet Services – May 22 set a record for the biggest year over year monthly increase in history. Prices fell in June but began to grow again in July, reaching record highs in Sep>Apr. The January 2023 increase of 8.4% was the largest in history. YTD June again slipped a little to 7.0%. Growing demand with decreased availability is a formula for inflation.
  • Haircuts & Personal Services – The services segments, essential & non-essential were hit hardest by the pandemic. After a small decrease in March 22, prices turned up again. The YTD rate is 6% below the peaks in 21 & 22 but is 82% more than 2018>19. Consumers are paying 21% more than in 2019. This usually reduces the purchase frequency.
  • Total Pet – We have seen two different inflation patterns. After 2019, Prices in the Services segments continued to increase, and the rate grew as we moved into 2021. The product segments – Food and Supplies, were on a different path. They deflated in 2020 and didn’t return to 2019 levels until mid-year 2021. Food prices began a slow increase, but Supplies remained stable until near yearend. In 2022, Food and Supplies prices turned sharply up. Food prices continued to climb until June. Supplies prices stabilized Apr>May, grew Jun>Oct, fell in Nov, rose in Dec>Feb, fell in Mar, rose in Apr>May then fell in June. The Services segments have also had ups & downs but are generally inflating. The net is a YTD Petflation rate vs 2022 of 10.2%, double the National rate. In May 22 it was 5.8% below the CPI.

Petflation is still strong. Let’s put the numbers into perspective. Petflation slowed from 10.3% in May to 9.6% in June. This is below the record 12.0% set in November, but it is a record for the month. More bad news is that 9 of the last 11 months have been over 10% and the current rate is still 6 times more than the 1.6% average rate from 2010>2021. It’s also more than triple the national rate. There is no doubt that the current pricing tsunami is a significant event in the history of the Pet Industry, but will it affect Pet Parents’ spending. In our demographic analysis of the annual Consumer Expenditure Survey which is conducted by the US BLS with help from the Census Bureau we have seen that Pet spending continues to move to higher income groups. However, the impact of inflation varies by segment. Supplies is the most affected as since 2009 many categories have become commoditized which makes them more price sensitive. Super Premium Food has become widespread because the perceived value has grown. Higher prices generally just push people to value shop. Veterinary prices have strongly inflated for years, resulting in a decrease in visit frequency. Spending in the Services segment is the most driven by higher incomes, so inflation is less impactful. This spending behavior of Pet Parents suggests that we should look a little deeper. Inflation is not just a singular event. It is cumulative. Total Pet Prices are up 9.6% from 2022 but they are up 19.2% from 2021 and 23.3% from 2019. That is a huge increase in a very short period. It puts tremendous monetary pressure on Pet Parents to prioritize their expenditures. We know that the needs of their pet children are always a high priority but let’s hope for a little relief – stabilized prices and even deflation. This is not likely in the Service segments but is definitely possible in products. It’s happened before. We need it again.