The annual inflation rate rose to 0.3%, up from 0% in April, the EU's statistics agency Eurostat. said.
The
return of inflation is likely to be welcomed by the European Central
Bank (ECB), which has sought to avoid deflation in recent months.
Prices of services rose 1.3%, while food and drink prices were up 1.2%.
Energy
prices fell at a slower pace. They were down 5% in May from a year
earlier, compared with an annual fall of 5.8% seen in April.
The
core inflation rate, which strips out volatile items such as food,
energy and tobacco, was up 0.9% in the year to May from April's 0.6%.
Deflation 'increasingly unlikely'
In March, the ECB began a massive €1.1 trillion bond buying programme in an attempt to stimulate the eurozone economy.
The latest inflation figure will raise hopes that the programme is working.
Policymakers
spent much of last year in fear of deflation. The worry is that if
price falls become entrenched, consumers and businesses will delay
purchases and investment in the expectation that prices will fall
further.
Consumer inflation has not been at the ECB's target level
of close to, but below, 2% since the start of 2013, and has been
falling since hitting 3% in late 2011.
"This increase was
stronger than widely expected, even if inflation is hardly racing
ahead," said Howard Archer, chief European economist at IHS Global
Insight.
"Renewed dips into deflation for the eurozone are
looking increasingly unlikely with the risks diluted by a firming in oil
prices from their January lows, the weakness of the euro and improved
eurozone economic activity."
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