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Personal Finance & Money

How to Use the Inflation Calculator

CalConvs Team
May 25, 2026
Personal Finance & Money

Inflation is the gradual rise in the price of goods and services over time. It means that one hundred dollars today will buy less in five years, and considerably less in twenty years. Understanding inflation is essential for retirement planning, salary negotiations, investment decisions and any long-term financial goal.

This guide explains what inflation is, how the Inflation Calculator works and how to apply it to real financial decisions.

What Is Inflation?

Inflation is usually measured using a price index that tracks the cost of a standard basket of goods and services over time. The most widely used measure in the United States is the Consumer Price Index (CPI), published monthly by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

When the CPI rises, the purchasing power of money falls. A dollar buys less than it did before. This is why wages, savings and investment returns need to grow at least as fast as inflation to maintain real value.

Historical US Inflation Rates

Average Annual US Inflation by Decade

1970s: approximately 7% per year (including oil price shock period)

1980s: approximately 5% per year

1990s: approximately 3% per year

2000s: approximately 2.5% per year

2010s: approximately 2% per year

2021 to 2022: approximately 7 to 9% (post-pandemic surge)

2023 onwards: declining toward the 2 to 3% range

The US Federal Reserve targets 2% annual inflation as the long-run goal.

How the Inflation Calculator Works

The calculator uses the compound inflation formula to calculate how prices change over time. It works in two directions: forward (what will something cost in the future?) and backward (what was the equivalent cost in the past?).

Inflation Formula: What Will 50,000 Dollars Be Worth in 20 Years?

Formula: Future value = Present value × (1 + inflation rate)^years

Future cost = 50,000 × (1 + 0.025)^20 = 50,000 × 1.6386 = 81,930 dollars

You will need 81,930 dollars in 20 years to have the same purchasing power as 50,000 dollars today (at 2.5% inflation).

Purchasing Power Loss Over Different Time Horizons

Inflation RateValue of 1 Dollar at Year 10Value of 1 Dollar at Year 30
2% inflation82.0 cents55.0 cents
2.5% inflation78.1 cents47.7 cents
3% inflation74.4 cents41.2 cents
4% inflation67.6 cents30.8 cents
7% inflation50.8 cents13.1 cents

Five Practical Ways to Use the Inflation Calculator

1. Retirement Income Planning

If you plan to retire in 25 years and want an annual income of 50,000 dollars in today's money, use the inflation calculator to find what that income needs to be in future dollars. At 2.5 percent annual inflation over 25 years, 50,000 dollars today requires approximately 93,000 dollars in 25 years to have the same purchasing power. Use the Retirement Calculator to build a savings target around that inflated number.

2. Understanding Historical Prices

Use the backward calculation to understand what past prices equate to today. A house that cost 25,000 dollars in 1970 would cost approximately 195,000 dollars in 2024 simply due to inflation, before any real appreciation in property values.

3. Comparing Salary Offers

If you received a 3 percent pay rise but inflation is running at 4 percent, your real wage fell by about 1 percent. If you earn 60,000 dollars today and inflation is 4 percent, you need 62,400 dollars next year just to maintain your current purchasing power.

4. Investment Return Comparison

An investment earning 5 percent per year sounds attractive. But if inflation is 3 percent, your real return is only 2 percent. Use the calculator to strip inflation out of nominal returns and compare them on a like-for-like basis.

5. Loan and Mortgage Context

A fixed mortgage payment actually becomes cheaper in real terms as inflation rises. A 2,000 dollar monthly payment in today's dollars will feel like a 1,651 dollar payment in ten years at 2 percent inflation. Use the Mortgage Calculator and the Inflation Calculator together to see this effect.

The Rule of 72: A Quick Inflation Shortcut

Rule of 72: Years for Prices to Double

Formula: Years to double = 72 ÷ inflation rate

At 2% inflation: 72 ÷ 2 = 36 years for prices to double

At 3% inflation: 72 ÷ 3 = 24 years for prices to double

At 4% inflation: 72 ÷ 4 = 18 years for prices to double

At 7% inflation: 72 ÷ 7 = approximately 10 years for prices to double

Related Tools

Frequently Asked Questions

What inflation rate should I use for long-term planning?

For general long-term planning in the US, a rate of 2.5 to 3 percent per year is a reasonable baseline. This is close to the Federal Reserve's 2 percent target, with a slight buffer for periods when inflation runs above target. For retirement planning specifically, some planners use a higher rate of 3 to 4 percent for healthcare costs, which tend to inflate faster than general prices.

How does inflation affect savings in a bank account?

If your savings account earns 2 percent interest and inflation is 3 percent, your money is losing purchasing power at a rate of about 1 percent per year. In real terms you are getting poorer even though your balance is growing. This is why holding large amounts of cash long-term is financially harmful during normal inflation periods.

Is deflation better than inflation?

Mild, stable inflation (around 2 percent) is generally considered healthier for an economy than deflation. Deflation causes consumers to delay purchases (expecting lower prices tomorrow), reduces business revenues and makes debt more expensive in real terms. Extended deflation is associated with recessions. Most central banks actively target a small positive inflation rate for this reason.

What is the difference between inflation and the cost of living?

Inflation measures the average rate of price increase across a standard basket of goods and services. Cost of living refers to the total amount needed to maintain a given standard of living in a specific location. Cost of living varies significantly by city and country, while inflation measures change over time rather than variation between places.

Last updated on 5/25/2026