The lone province dodging South Africa’s meat-price inflation spike
If you are braaing in Gauteng, you are paying the highest meat tax in South Africa, with inflation in the province hitting 15.2%.
South African consumers have just lived through a record-breaking year, with 2025 delivering the lowest average annual inflation rate in 21 years at just 3.2%.
However, the celebratory mood at the checkout counter is being soured by a meat crisis that varies wildly depending on which province you call home.
According to the latest data from Statistics South Africa (Stats SA), meat inflation accelerated to 12.6% in December 2025, a massive leap from the -0.4% recorded only a year prior. While the headline inflation rate remains within the South African Reserve Bank’s target, the cost of protein has become a primary driver of household distress, holding a significant weight of 5.10 in the Consumer Price Index.
Gauteng vs The Coast: A Massive Meat Divide
The real shock for consumers is the “postcode lottery” of meat pricing. If you are lighting a fire in Gauteng, you are paying the highest meat tax in the country, with inflation in the province hitting a staggering 15.2%. The inland trend continues through Limpopo (14.3%) and Mpumalanga (13.6%), both of which significantly outpace the national average.
Meanwhile, those in the Eastern Cape are enjoying some relative relief. The province recorded the lowest meat inflation at just 7.0% – less than half the rate seen in Gauteng.
Data Breakdown: Annual Meat Inflation by Province (Dec 2025)
| Province | Annual % Change |
|---|---|
| Gauteng | 15.2% |
| Limpopo | 14.3% |
| Mpumalanga | 13.6% |
| Free State | 12.3% |
| National Urban Average | 12.6% |
| Northern Cape | 11.0% |
| Western Cape | 10.7% |
| North West | 10.1% |
| KwaZulu-Natal | 9.7% |
| Eastern Cape | 7.0% |
Source: Stats SA
The Braai Staples Hitting Hardest
The regional disparity is compounded by the types of meat South Africans prefer for their braais. Beef steak has seen a national price explosion of 29.4%, while braai staples like sausages and boerewors have jumped by 19.4% and 18.2% respectively.
While there was a slight monthly reprieve in October 2025 where prices stalled, the December 2025 surge confirms that meat remains a volatile risk for 2026 budgets.