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Inflation calculator

Money tends to buy less as the years pass, and this tool puts numbers on that. Enter an amount, the inflation rate you expect, and how many years to project, and it works out both sides of the coin: what a given purchase will cost in future, and how much spending power a fixed sum of money will have lost by then. It is useful for sense-checking a long-term savings target, judging whether a future salary keeps pace with prices, or seeing how far cash erodes if it sits idle.

Amount today ($)
Inflation rate a year (%)
Years ahead
Cost in 10 years
$1,343.92
Increase
$343.92
Total rise
34.4%

How it works

  1. Enter an amount in current money and the annual inflation rate you want to assume.
  2. Set the number of years to look ahead.
  3. For future cost, the amount is multiplied by (1 + rate) raised to the power of the years.
  4. For future spending power, the amount is divided by that same factor, showing what it would buy in current terms.

future cost = amount x (1 + r)^n; future power = amount / (1 + r)^n

To project a future price, the amount is multiplied by one plus the annual rate, raised to the number of years. To show lost spending power, the same amount is divided by that factor, telling you what the money would buy in current terms. Because the factor is raised to a power, the effect builds on itself year after year rather than adding a flat slice.

amount
a sum in today money
r
annual inflation rate as a decimal
n
number of years projected

Inflation rates for reference

Bank of England target 2% measured on CPI
European Central Bank target 2% over the medium term
UK CPI peak, October 2022 11.1% a 41-year high
Rule-of-72 doubling at 3% ≈ 24 years for prices to double

Worked example

1,000 at 3 percent inflation over 10 years: something costing 1,000 now would cost about 1,344 then, while a 1,000 note kept under the mattress would buy only around 744 worth of goods. Higher rates widen both gaps quickly.

Key facts

Tips

A sum of 1,000 at 3% inflation

YearsFuture costFuture spending power
51,159863
101,344744
201,806554
302,427412

Frequently asked questions

What inflation rate should I assume?+

Many central banks target roughly 2 percent a year, though several recent years ran well above that in many countries. Trying two or three rates gives you a sensible range rather than a single guess.

Is this the same as investment growth?+

No. This shows price changes alone. To see money grow ahead of inflation, use the compound interest or savings goal calculators, which add returns rather than erode value.

Does it use my country's actual inflation?+

No. The rate is whatever you enter, so it is not tied to any official index. For a realistic figure, check your national statistics office for recent and forecast inflation.

Why do small rate changes matter so much over time?+

Inflation compounds, so each year applies to an already-inflated figure. Over a decade or two, the difference between 2 and 4 percent becomes large rather than double.

Last updated: 2026

Estimate only

This is an estimate for general guidance, not financial, tax, legal or medical advice. Figures can change and individual circumstances vary. Always confirm with the official sources listed before making decisions.

Reviewed by Vikas Dulgunde.

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