A survey published in June indicates that inflation expectations among Turkish households improve slightly, while expectations for other groups remain largely stable. According to the report, household inflation expectations rise modestly compared with the previous period. In contrast, inflation expectations of market participants and those of the real sector are broadly unchanged, suggesting limited movement outside households. The findings point to a divergence between how households and other segments of the economy assess near-term inflation pressures. The survey’s results are framed as a small positive shift for household sentiment, but they do not indicate a broader change across the economy, since expectations for market participants and the real sector do not show notable variation. Overall, the data describe a marginal improvement limited to households, with other surveyed groups maintaining roughly the same expectations in June.