However, prices of manufactured products and fuel and power continue to climb.
Overall inflation, as measured on the basis of the Wholesale Price Index, has been revised to 9.04 per cent for March from the original projection of 8.98 per cent.
The revision was carried out as metal products were not incorporated earlier due to a programming error, the Department of Economic Affairs said.
In addition, the inflation figure for February has also been revised upward to 9.54 per cent from the provisional 8.31 per cent.
Chief economic advisor Kaushik Basu recently said that headline inflation in April would come down to 8.5-8.6 per cent and the latest figures seem to affirm his prediction.
The numbers for April are also lower than the 9 per cent average inflation projected by the Reserve Bank for the first half of this fiscal.
In its monetary policy for 2011-12, released earlier this month, the RBI said that inflationary pressure would continue to sustain for some more months before moderating to around 6 per cent by March, 2012.
Food inflation, which accounts for nearly 15 per cent of overall WPI inflation, stood at 7.70 per cent for the week ended April 30.
The prices of primary articles -- food, non-food articles and minerals -- shot up by 12.05 per cent on an annual basis, according to the official data released on Monday.
Among primary articles, food items went up by 8.71 per cent, while non-food primary articles rose by over 27