Inflation Calculator 2025 | What Is $X Worth Today? – EmergencyFundCalculator.com
BLS CPI Data 1913–2025 · Updated Monthly

Inflation Calculator

Find what any dollar amount is worth across any two years from 1913 to 2025. Uses official Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI data. See how inflation erodes purchasing power, savings, and salaries.

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Official BLS Data
Inflation Calculator
Purchasing power · Salary comparison · Savings erosion · BLS CPI 1913–2025
Official BLS Data
Quick presets
Convert purchasing power between years
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Uses the annual average CPI-U (Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers) from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — the official inflation measure covering ~93% of the U.S. population.

Has your salary kept up with inflation?
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This shows whether your real (inflation-adjusted) income has actually increased. A salary rise smaller than inflation is effectively a pay cut in purchasing power.

How inflation erodes uninvested cash
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yrs

Silent wealth destruction: Cash earning 0% in a checking account at 3% inflation loses ~26% of its real value in 10 years. This is why your emergency fund should be in a HYSA earning 4–5% APY — keeping pace with or beating inflation.

Inflation-Adjusted Value
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Cumulative Inflation
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Total price rise
Purchasing Power Lost
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Avg Annual Rate
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Per year
Years Covered
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Year span
Real Purchasing Power Remaining
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Purchasing power eroded
CPI Trend Over Selected Period
Annual Inflation Rates in Selected Period
Save Your Inflation Report
3.2%
Average U.S. annual inflation rate since 1913 (CPI-U)
9.1%
Peak inflation rate June 2022 — highest since 1981
$3.22
What $1 from 1913 buys today — 96.9% purchasing power lost
2%
Federal Reserve's annual inflation target for economic stability

About This Inflation Calculator

Built on official BLS data, this is the most comprehensive free inflation calculator available — covering purchasing power, salary comparison, and savings erosion from 1913 to 2025.

About the Inflation Calculator

The EmergencyFundCalculator.com Inflation Calculator uses annual average CPI-U (Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers) data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — the official U.S. inflation measure used by the IRS for tax bracket adjustments, the Social Security Administration for COLA increases, and the Federal Reserve for monetary policy decisions.

This calculator goes beyond a simple dollar converter. It offers three calculation modes: Purchasing Power to convert any dollar amount between any two years from 1913 to 2025; Salary to determine whether your income has outpaced, kept pace with, or fallen behind inflation; and Savings Erosion to model how inflation silently destroys the real value of uninvested cash over time — and why keeping an emergency fund in a 4–5% APY HYSA is critical.

All calculations run entirely in your browser. No data is transmitted or stored. Your financial information never leaves your device.

Data source note: Uses BLS CPI-U annual averages (Series ID: CUUR0000SA0). 2025 data uses the most recent available annual average. The CPI basket is updated periodically — long-range comparisons (e.g., 1913 to 2025) are directionally accurate but should be understood as estimates given methodology changes over 112 years.

What Is Inflation?

The most important economic force affecting your money — and the one most people understand least.

Inflation: The Complete Definition

Inflation is the general, sustained rise in the price level of goods and services over time. When inflation occurs, each dollar buys fewer goods and services than it did before — meaning the purchasing power of money declines.

Inflation isn't one price going up — it's the average price level across a broad basket of goods: housing, food, transportation, medical care, clothing, education, and more. Some prices rise faster than others; the CPI measures the weighted average across all categories relevant to a typical urban American household.

Three Types of Inflation

TypeDefinitionCauseExample
Demand-PullToo much money chasing too few goodsEconomic boom, excess government stimulusPost-COVID consumer spending surge 2021–2022
Cost-PushRising production costs passed to consumersSupply chain disruptions, energy price spikes1970s oil embargo, 2022 supply chain crisis
Built-In (Wage-Price)Workers demand higher wages → companies raise pricesWage-price spiral in tight labor markets1970s–1980s stagflation spiral

Inflation vs. Deflation vs. Stagflation

  • Inflation (2–4%): Moderate and healthy for growth. Encourages spending and investment. Fed target is 2%. Current U.S. environment (2024–2025).
  • Hyperinflation (>50%/month): Economic catastrophe. Wages and savings destroyed. Examples: Zimbabwe (2008), Weimar Germany (1923), Venezuela (2018).
  • Deflation (negative inflation): Falling prices sound good but cause economic stagnation — consumers delay spending waiting for lower prices, triggering recession spirals. Japan's "Lost Decade" 1990–2000.
  • Stagflation (high inflation + low growth): The worst combination. Rising prices but shrinking economy and high unemployment. U.S. experienced this in the 1970s — the Fed's greatest historical challenge.

What Is the CPI and How Is It Calculated?

The Consumer Price Index is the official measurement of inflation in the United States — and understanding it reveals exactly what this calculator measures.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) Explained

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a monthly economic indicator published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). It measures the average change in prices paid by consumers for a fixed "market basket" of goods and services representing typical purchases by an American urban household.

The BLS surveys prices for approximately 80,000 items per month from 23,000 retail establishments and 50,000 housing units across 75 urban areas. The CPI is then calculated as a weighted average reflecting each category's share of typical consumer spending.

CPI Basket Weights (2023–2024)

CategoryWeight in CPIWhat It Covers
Housing42.4%Rent, owner's equivalent rent, utilities, household furnishings
Transportation18.2%New/used vehicles, auto insurance, gas, public transit
Food & Beverages13.9%Groceries, restaurant meals, non-alcoholic beverages
Medical Care7.3%Health insurance, prescriptions, hospital services, doctor visits
Education & Communication6.3%Tuition, textbooks, phone service, internet, computers
Recreation5.4%Entertainment, TV/streaming, sports equipment, pets
Other6.5%Apparel, personal care, tobacco, financial services

The CPI Formula

Inflation Adjustment Formula:
  Adjusted Value = Original Amount × (CPI in Target Year ÷ CPI in Base Year)

Example: $1,000 in 1990 → 2025
  CPI 1990  = 130.7
  CPI 2025  = ~314.5 (estimated annual average)
  Adjusted  = $1,000 × (314.5 ÷ 130.7) = $2,406

  Cumulative inflation: (314.5 - 130.7) / 130.7 = 140.6%
  Average annual rate: (314.5/130.7)^(1/35) - 1 = 2.6%/year

CPI-U vs. CPI-W vs. Core CPI

MeasurePopulationPrimary Use
CPI-U (used in this calculator)All urban consumers — ~93% of U.S. populationGeneral inflation measure; tax bracket adjustments; public reporting
CPI-WUrban wage and clerical workersSocial Security COLA calculations
Core CPICPI-U excluding food and energyFed monetary policy — strips out volatile components
PCEPersonal Consumption Expenditures indexFederal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge; slightly different methodology

How the Inflation Calculator Works

A transparent explanation of the three calculation modes and the BLS data behind them.

Three Calculation Modes Explained

Mode 1: Purchasing Power

Converts any dollar amount from one year's purchasing power to another using the standard CPI ratio formula. Enter $1,000 in 1990, choose 2025, and the calculator tells you how much you'd need today to buy the same things that $1,000 bought in 1990. It also shows cumulative inflation rate, average annual rate, and a CPI trend chart for the selected period.

Mode 2: Salary Comparison

Enter your salary in a past year and your current salary, and the calculator determines whether your real income has increased, stayed flat, or decreased. A $50,000 salary in 2000 that grew to $80,000 by 2025 sounds like a 60% raise — but with cumulative inflation of ~96%, the real raise in purchasing power is only about -18%. This is "real wage stagnation" — you earn more dollars but can buy less.

Results show: inflation-required salary to maintain purchasing power, your actual salary change vs. inflation-required change, real wage gain or loss, and percentage above or below inflation.

Mode 3: Savings Erosion

Projects how inflation destroys the real value of uninvested cash over a custom timeframe using a compound erosion model. Enter your savings balance, an assumed annual inflation rate, and a projection period. The calculator shows the real purchasing power remaining each year and the total wealth destroyed by inflation — making viscerally clear why cash under a mattress (or in a 0% checking account) is financially self-destructive.

The solution to savings erosion: Keep your emergency fund in a High-Yield Savings Account (HYSA) earning 4–5% APY — currently higher than the ~3% inflation rate. This makes your emergency fund actually grow in real terms rather than erode. Use our Emergency Fund Calculator to find your exact savings target.

How to Use the Inflation Calculator

Step-by-step guide to getting the most from all three calculation modes.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. 1
    Choose a quick preset or enter your own values — Use the orange preset buttons for common comparisons (e.g., "$100 in 1990 → 2025"), or enter any custom amount, start year, and end year. Year dropdowns include every year from 1913 to 2025.
  2. 2
    Select a calculation mode — "Purchasing Power" for general dollar conversion; "Salary" to compare your income against inflation; "Savings" to project how inflation erodes uninvested cash over a custom period.
  3. 3
    Use the swap button for reverse calculations — The ↔ button between year selectors instantly swaps from/to years for reverse lookups ("What was 2025's $1,000 worth in 1990?").
  4. 4
    Click "Calculate Inflation Impact" — Results appear instantly with: your inflation-adjusted value, cumulative inflation rate, average annual rate, purchasing power bar, a CPI trend chart, and annual rate breakdown for the selected period.
  5. 5
    Download your report — Click "Download My Inflation Summary" to save a complete text report with all your inputs, results, and financial action steps.

Most useful calculations to try: Your home purchase price → today's value. Your first salary → what you'd need to earn the same today. Your current savings → what it buys in 10 years at 3% inflation. Any of these reveals something important about your financial situation.

U.S. Inflation History — Key Periods Since 1913

Understanding historical inflation patterns provides context for planning — every inflationary episode has unique causes and consequences.

Major U.S. Inflation Periods

PeriodAvg Annual RateKey DriverNotable Events
1913–1920~10–17%WWI spending & wartime shortagesFed created 1913; 1920 peak: 15.6%
1920–1940~0% (deflation)Great Depression demand collapse1932: -10.3% deflation; bread lines
1940–1948~6–14%WWII military spending & post-war demand1946 peak: 18.1%; price controls lifted
1950–1965~1–3%Post-war stability, Korean War bumpGolden era of low inflation; middle class growth
1965–1982~5–14%Vietnam spending, oil shocks, stagflation1980 peak: 13.5%; Volcker shock — Fed raises rates to 20%
1982–2020~2–3%Fed credibility, globalization, tech productivityLongest low-inflation era in modern history
2020–20224–9.1%COVID stimulus, supply chain crisis, energyJune 2022: 9.1% — highest since November 1981
2022–2025~3–4%Fed rate hikes (5.25–5.5%) workedRapid disinflation; approaching 2% target by 2025

What $1 Was Worth Over Key Decades

YearCPI-U (approx)$1 is worth in 2025Cumulative inflation since then
19139.9$31.77+3,077%
195024.1$13.05+1,205%
197038.8$8.11+711%
1990130.7$2.41+141%
2000172.2$1.83+83%
2010218.1$1.44+44%
2020258.8$1.22+22%
2025~314.5$1.00Baseline

How Inflation Affects Your Savings, Salary, and Investments

Inflation touches every financial decision you make — understanding its effects helps you protect and grow your wealth.

Inflation's Real Impact on Personal Finance

Impact on Savings & Cash

Cash is the most inflation-vulnerable asset. At 3% annual inflation, $10,000 in a 0% checking account has the purchasing power of $7,441 in 10 years and only $4,120 in 30 years — just 41% of its original real value.

Savings Erosion at 3% Annual Inflation:
  $10,000 today
  Year 5:  $8,626 real value  (lost $1,374)
  Year 10: $7,441 real value  (lost $2,559)
  Year 20: $5,537 real value  (lost $4,463)
  Year 30: $4,120 real value  (lost $5,880)

With HYSA at 4.5% APY (beating inflation by 1.5%):
  Year 10: $11,552 real value (+$1,552 growth)
  Year 30: $15,396 real value (+$5,396 growth)

Impact on Salaries & Real Wages

Your nominal salary (the number on your paycheck) can rise while your real salary (what you can actually buy) falls. From 2020 to 2023, cumulative inflation exceeded 17% — meaning workers who received less than a 17% total raise actually experienced a pay cut in real terms, even though their paychecks showed higher numbers.

  • Real raise: Salary growth that exceeds the inflation rate. At 6% salary growth and 3% inflation, real wage growth = ~2.9%.
  • Inflation-neutral: Salary grew at exactly the inflation rate. You can buy the same things — no better, no worse.
  • Real wage cut: Salary grew slower than inflation. Despite earning more dollars, you can buy less. This happened to many workers during 2021–2023 when inflation exceeded most salary increases.

Impact on Investments

Investment returns must be evaluated in real (inflation-adjusted) terms, not just nominal returns. The S&P 500's 10% historical nominal annual return becomes approximately 7% real return after 3% inflation — still excellent, but significantly lower than the headline number suggests. This is why this calculator's sister tool, the Investment Calculator, shows both nominal and real (inflation-adjusted) values side by side.

Asset ClassNominal Returnvs. 3% InflationReal ReturnVerdict
Cash / Checking (0%)0%-3%-3%Loses purchasing power every year
HYSA (4.5% APY)4.5%-3%+1.5%Beats inflation — emergency fund ideal
Treasury Bonds (~4–5%)4–5%-3%+1–2%Modest real return; safe
S&P 500 Index Fund (~10%)~10%-3%~+7%Best long-term inflation hedge
Real Estate (~5–8%)5–8%-3%+2–5%Good inflation hedge; illiquid
TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected)CPI + real yieldAutomatically adjusted+0.5–2%Direct inflation hedge; government-backed

How to Protect Your Wealth Against Inflation

Practical, evidence-based strategies ranked from most accessible to most sophisticated.

Inflation-Beating Strategies

  1. 1
    Move cash to a High-Yield Savings Account (HYSA): The single easiest move. Online banks (Ally, Marcus, SoFi, Discover) offer 4–5% APY — currently beating inflation. Takes 10 minutes to open. Your emergency fund should always be here, not in a 0% checking account. See your target with our Emergency Fund Calculator.
  2. 2
    Invest in diversified stock index funds: The S&P 500 has returned ~10% nominal / ~7% real annually since 1926 — the most powerful long-term inflation hedge available to ordinary investors. Low-cost index funds (VTI, FSKAX) give you instant exposure. Time in the market is what matters — not timing. See projections with our Investment Calculator.
  3. 3
    Maximize tax-advantaged retirement accounts: Traditional 401(k) and IRA contributions reduce your taxable income today while assets grow tax-deferred. Roth accounts grow tax-free forever. Either way, compound growth without annual tax drag dramatically outpaces inflation over decades.
  4. 4
    Consider I-Bonds (Series I Savings Bonds): U.S. Treasury inflation-protected savings bonds with rates that adjust every 6 months based on CPI. Currently paying competitive rates during high-inflation periods. Limited to $10,000/year per person. Held at TreasuryDirect.gov.
  5. 5
    TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities): Government bonds whose principal adjusts with CPI — meaning the interest paid increases with inflation. Purchased through TreasuryDirect.gov or most brokerages. Ideal for retirees seeking guaranteed inflation protection.
  6. 6
    Real estate investment: Property historically appreciates at or above inflation while generating rental income. REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) provide real estate exposure without homeownership — accessible through any brokerage account.
  7. 7
    Negotiate salary to outpace CPI: The most direct personal inflation hedge. Use the Salary tab of this calculator to see exactly what raise you need to maintain purchasing power — then use that data in your next salary negotiation.

The anti-inflation portfolio hierarchy: (1) Emergency fund in HYSA (beat inflation safely on liquid cash) → (2) Max 401(k)/IRA (tax-advantaged stock growth) → (3) Taxable brokerage index funds (additional inflation-beating equity) → (4) TIPS/I-Bonds for guaranteed real return on fixed income. This order maximizes both safety and long-term purchasing power.

Related Free Financial Calculators

Plan Your Complete Inflation Defense

Use these free calculators alongside the Inflation Calculator to build a complete financial plan that protects and grows your purchasing power.

Inflation Calculator FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is inflation and why does it matter?

Inflation is the general rise in prices over time, which reduces the purchasing power of money. At 3% annual inflation, $100 today buys what $97 bought last year. It matters because it affects every dollar you earn, save, invest, and spend. The Federal Reserve targets 2% annual inflation as optimal — enough to encourage spending and investment, but not so much that it damages savings and economic stability.

What is the CPI and how is this calculator calculated?

The CPI (Consumer Price Index) is published monthly by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. It measures price changes for a fixed "basket" of ~80,000 goods and services including housing (42.4% weight), transportation (18.2%), food (13.9%), and medical care (7.3%). This calculator uses the CPI-U annual average for each year — Adjusted Value = Original Amount × (CPI Target Year ÷ CPI Base Year). Data covers 1913–2025.

What has the average U.S. inflation rate been?

Since 1913: approximately 3.2% per year on average. Since 1990: approximately 2.6% per year. The Fed's target is 2%. The highest peacetime rate was 13.5% in 1980. The most recent high was 9.1% in June 2022. By 2024–2025, inflation returned to approximately 2.9% — approaching the 2% target. Historical note: deflation (negative inflation) occurred during the Great Depression of the 1930s.

How does inflation affect my emergency fund?

At 3% inflation, $15,000 in a 0% account loses ~26% of its real value in 10 years — your emergency fund "covers" fewer months than you think. The solution: keep your emergency fund in a High-Yield Savings Account (HYSA) earning 4–5% APY. At current HYSA rates, your emergency fund actually grows in real terms. Use our Emergency Fund Calculator to find your exact target.

What is the difference between nominal and real value?

Nominal value is the face dollar amount. Real value is adjusted for inflation and reflects actual purchasing power. If your salary grew from $50,000 to $60,000 (20% nominal increase) but inflation was 20% over the same period, your real salary didn't change — you earn more dollars but can buy exactly the same things. Always evaluate financial decisions in real terms, not just nominal numbers.

Is my data private?

Yes, completely private. All calculations run in your browser using JavaScript and the embedded BLS CPI dataset. No data is ever transmitted to any server, stored in any database, or shared with any third party. Your financial numbers never leave your device.

Sources & Official Resources

Official Data Sources

All CPI data embedded in this calculator is sourced from BLS CPI-U annual averages (Series CUUR0000SA0). For exact current figures, visit bls.gov/cpi. Calculator estimates only — not financial advice.

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