Inflatiecalculator
Bereken koopkracht over tijd met inflatiegegevens. Ontdek hoeveel een historisch bedrag vandaag waard is.
Inflatiecalculator
Wat is de Inflatiecalculator?
An inflation calculator adjusts the value of money across time, showing how rising prices erode purchasing power and how much more — or less — a given amount is worth in a different year. Enter an original amount, a starting year, a target year, and an annual inflation rate, and the calculator applies compound interest in reverse (or forward) to show the inflation-adjusted equivalent value, total cumulative inflation over the period, and the percentage of purchasing power lost.
Inflation is one of the most consequential and least intuitive forces in personal finance. Its effects are invisible year to year — a 3% annual inflation rate feels like almost nothing on a monthly grocery trip — but devastating over decades. A dollar in 1980 could buy what costs over $3.80 today. A $50,000 salary in 2000 has the same purchasing power as approximately $88,000 in 2024. Every financial plan that extends beyond a few years must account for inflation explicitly — failing to do so systematically overstates the real value of future money.
This calculator is essential for retirement planning (how much will $1 million actually buy in 30 years?), salary negotiation (is my raise keeping up with inflation?), historical cost comparison (what did a house cost in 1970 in today's money?), and investment return analysis (what is my real return after subtracting inflation?). The formula is identical to compound interest — because inflation compounds exactly like interest, just applied to prices instead of balances.
Inflatiecalculator Formule
Adjusted Amount = Original × (1 + Rate/100)^Years Where Years = To Year − From Year Rate = Annual inflation rate as a percentage Total Inflation % = ((Adjusted / Original) − 1) × 100 Purchasing Power Loss % = (1 − Original / Adjusted) × 100 = 1 − (1 / (1 + Rate/100)^Years) × 100 Real Value of Original in Target Year's Terms: Real Value = Original / (1 + Rate/100)^Years
Inflatiecalculator Voorbeeld
Example 1 — Savings account purchasing power: $10,000 in 2000 adjusted to 2024 at 3% average inflation. Years = 24. Adjusted = $10,000 × (1.03)^24 = $20,328. Total inflation = 103.3%. Purchasing power loss = 50.8%. Conclusion: your $10,000 in 2000 now buys about the same as $4,919 today.
Example 2 — Salary in real terms: $50,000 salary in 2010, inflation averaged 2.8% through 2024 (14 years). Adjusted for inflation: $50,000 × (1.028)^14 = $74,005. To maintain the same real purchasing power in 2024, the salary needs to be $74,005. If the actual 2024 salary is only $65,000, that is a real pay cut of $9,005.
Example 3 — Retirement projection: $500,000 retirement balance needed today. What will $500,000 buy in 25 years at 3% inflation? Real value = $500,000 ÷ (1.03)^25 = $239,000 in today's purchasing power. Conclusion: you actually need approximately $1,047,000 in nominal future savings to match today's $500,000 in purchasing power.
Hoe de Inflatiecalculator te gebruiken
- 1Enter the original dollar amount — the sum you want to adjust for inflation. Then set the starting year (when the original amount is measured from) and the target year (the year you want to express the value in). You can go backward in time (historical lookups) or forward (future projections).
- 2Set the annual inflation rate. The default of 3% reflects the long-run U.S. CPI average since 1913. For near-term projections, use the most recent 12-month CPI figure. For healthcare costs, use 4–6%. For college tuition, use 5–7%. For general planning over 20+ years, 2.5–3% is a conservative and widely used assumption.
- 3Click Calculate. The results show the Adjusted Amount (what the original sum is equivalent to in the target year), Total Inflation (the compounded percentage price increase over the period), Purchasing Power Lost (how much buying power has eroded), and Years Elapsed. For retirement planning, the adjusted amount tells you the minimum you need to maintain current purchasing power — a critical number for savings goals.
Waarom Inflatiecalculator belangrijk is
Inflation is the silent tax that operates on every dollar you hold, earn, or save. Unlike income taxes — visible, contested, and frequently reduced by deductions — inflation works automatically and continuously, reducing the real value of money without any transaction, paperwork, or decision required. A person who holds $100,000 in a zero-interest checking account for 10 years at 3% annual inflation effectively loses $26,000 in purchasing power while watching their nominal balance stay flat. The money appears safe and unchanged; in real terms, it has significantly decreased.
For long-term financial planning — retirement, education funding, major purchases — ignoring inflation produces systematically incorrect conclusions. The most common planning mistake is looking at a future nominal savings balance and concluding it represents adequate security, without adjusting for inflation. A retirement calculator that shows $1,000,000 saved by age 65 may look impressive until you realize that at 3% inflation over 30 years, $1,000,000 in future dollars has only $412,000 of today's purchasing power. Whether that is enough depends entirely on your current spending needs — which requires the inflation adjustment.
For salary and wage earners, tracking real versus nominal income growth is the most objective measure of whether living standards are improving. From 2020 to 2023, many American workers received raises of 3–5% while inflation ran at 5–9%, meaning real wages declined for millions of people despite nominal increases. Using this calculator to compare your salary in any two years at the actual CPI rate for that period provides the honest picture of whether your purchasing power has grown, stayed flat, or declined over your career.
Beperkingen & Nauwkeurigheid
This calculator uses a single fixed annual inflation rate for the entire period. In reality, inflation rates fluctuate significantly year by year and by expense category. The CPI rate in any given year has ranged from −0.4% (2009, deflation) to +13.5% (1979, peak oil shock) in U.S. history. Using a single average rate smooths out these fluctuations, which is appropriate for long-run planning but may understate or overstate inflation for specific shorter periods.
CPI measures the average price change for a representative basket of goods weighted by typical consumer spending. Your personal inflation rate may differ significantly from CPI if your spending patterns are non-average. Retirees typically spend more on healthcare (which inflates at 4–7% annually) and less on education and electronics (which deflate in price), making actual experienced inflation higher than headline CPI for many older adults. If your expenses are concentrated in specific categories, use a sector-specific inflation rate rather than the general CPI average.
This calculator does not measure the quality-adjusted value of goods and services. A dollar today buys a far more capable smartphone or computer than a dollar in 2000 — the quality has improved dramatically even as the nominal price stayed flat or fell. This hedonic adjustment is built into official CPI calculations (reducing measured inflation) but is invisible in simple dollar-to-dollar comparisons. Real purchasing power changes are somewhat more complex than any single metric captures.
Praktische Tips
- ✓For all financial goals with a horizon of 10+ years (retirement, education, major purchases), always convert nominal future values to real (inflation-adjusted) values before evaluating whether your savings target is sufficient. The rule of thumb: at 3% inflation, money loses roughly half its purchasing power every 24 years. A retirement target that looks large in nominal terms may be inadequate in real terms.
- ✓Protect long-term savings from inflation by investing in assets that historically outpace CPI: diversified equity index funds (historical real return of 7% after inflation), I-bonds (U.S. government bonds with guaranteed inflation indexing), REITs (real estate historically tracks or beats inflation), and TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities with CPI-adjusted principal). Holding large amounts in cash or low-yield savings for 10+ years is almost guaranteed to lose real purchasing power.
- ✓Use this calculator to evaluate salary offers and raises honestly. If you receive a 3% raise in a year when CPI inflation was 4.5%, you received a real pay cut of 1.5%. For salary negotiations, always frame target increases relative to recent inflation — a raise that merely keeps pace with CPI is maintenance, not growth. Meaningful real wage growth requires raises above the current inflation rate.
- ✓For healthcare cost planning in retirement, use a separate inflation rate of 4–6% rather than general CPI. Healthcare is the largest and fastest-growing expense for retirees — the typical couple retiring today is projected to spend $315,000 on healthcare costs in retirement according to Fidelity. Medical inflation has historically run 2–3 percentage points above general CPI, making it the most dangerous underestimated expense in retirement planning.
Veelgestelde Vragen
Wat vertegenwoordigt het inflatiegecorrigeerde bedrag?
Wat is het inflatiepercentage en hoe wordt het gemeten?
Waarom erodeert inflatie de koopkracht van spaargeld?
Wat is 'kerninflatie' en waarom verschilt die van totale inflatie?
Hoe bescherm ik mijn spaargeld tegen inflatie?
Wat is stagflatie?
Hoe beïnvloedt inflatie hypotheken met vaste vs variabele rente?
Hoe heeft inflatie de koopkracht in Nederland beïnvloed?
Ga Verder
Vertrouwde Bronnen & Methodologie
API-toegang
Binnenkorthttps://api.solviqlab.com/v1/inflation-calculatorREST API voor ontwikkelaars. Integreer deze tool in uw app.