While inflation measured by the CPI was 5.9 per cent from December 2020 to the December 2021 quarter (see Consumers price index: December 2021 quarter), inflation for the average household as measured in the HLPIs was 5.2 per cent.
In the past, the HLFI has shown those on fixed incomes - like beneficiaries and superannuants - suffering the worst effects of inflation.
But the latest data shows high-spending households experiencing the greatest rise in living costs - at 5.4 per cent.
This was mainly influenced by higher prices for petrol, mortgage interest payments, and second-hand motor cars, StatsNZ said.
Prices for all interest payments, including mortgage interest payments, increased 7.8 per cent in the December 2021 quarter.
"Highest-spending households spend 7.3 per cent of their expenditure on interest payments, compared with 4.6 per cent for the average household," StatsNZ said.
"This means the highest-spending households experience the price increase more than others."
Māori households experienced an annual living-cost increase of 5.3 per cent from December 2020 to the December 2021 quarter, compared with the 5.2 per cent experienced by the average household.
Superannuitants experienced a 5.2 per cent increase in living costs.
Beneficiary households experienced the lowest annual living-cost inflation of 4.8 per cent from December 2020 to the December 2021 quarter.
"Beneficiary households typically spend a smaller proportion of their expenditure on petrol and interest payments when compared to the average household," StatsNZ said.
Beneficiary households spend 2.1 per cent of their expenditure on interest payments, compared with 4.6 per cent for the average household.