CPI-backed inflation data
Historical and projected inflation rates reference Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI data and Federal Reserve forecasts.
Updated monthly after BLS CPI releases.
Understand how inflation erodes purchasing power over time. Calculate future prices, compare historical values, and plan your finances accordingly.
CPI-backed inflation data
Historical and projected inflation rates reference Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI data and Federal Reserve forecasts.
Updated monthly after BLS CPI releases.
Compliance & privacy
Inputs stay in your browser. Projections use publicly available government data.
Capture baseline spending, run scenarios, compare assets, and turn insights into action plans.
List today’s expenses by category, then lock in the inflation assumptions that match your market.
Project 5-, 10-, and 20-year outlooks to see how much more cash flow each goal needs.
Stack investment returns or savings rates against inflation so you know which buckets are falling behind.
Hand off the results to ROI, savings, or AI calculators to schedule raises, price increases, and portfolio shifts.
Quick Examples
Future Cost
$1,344
Today's Value
$744
Inflation Insights
Remember to factor inflation into long-term financial planning.
Future Cost: $1,344 · Value Erosion: 34.4%
We modeled a couple living on $78k per year to show how inflation adjustments keep their withdrawal plan intact.
Based on BLS CPI-U historical averages. Actual inflation may vary.
Case studies that link this tool with ROI and savings workflows.
Couple living on pensions and dividend income.
Parents saving for education in two currencies.
Inflation is the rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services rises, eroding purchasing power. Central banks attempt to limit inflation and avoid deflation to keep the economy running smoothly.
Official sources for inflation rates and purchasing power calculations.
Consumer Price Index (CPI) Data
Official CPI measurements from Bureau of Labor Statistics
Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Index
The Fed's preferred inflation measure
International Inflation Data
Global inflation comparison data
Cadence: BLS CPI monthly, Fed projections quarterly, Treasury rates daily.
Projections are for educational purposes only.
Inflation is caused by several factors: increased money supply, rising production costs, strong consumer demand, expectations of future inflation, and supply chain disruptions. Central banks try to manage inflation through monetary policy, primarily by adjusting interest rates.
No, moderate inflation (2-3% annually) is actually healthy for the economy. It encourages spending and investment rather than hoarding cash, signals economic growth, and allows for easier debt repayment. Problems arise with high inflation (reduces purchasing power) or deflation (discourages spending).
The most common measure is the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which tracks the average change in prices paid by urban consumers for a basket of goods and services. Other measures include the Producer Price Index (PPI), Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE), and the GDP deflator.
Track your actual spending over time in categories like housing, food, transportation, and healthcare. Compare year-over-year changes to find your personal rate. This may differ from CPI as everyone's spending patterns are unique. Focus on your largest expense categories for the most accurate picture.
Export the numbers to ROI and savings calculators to set hedges, price increases, and automation reminders.