Inflation Calculator
See how inflation changes future costs and purchasing power with the WealthCalcLab inflation calculator.
Updated April 10, 2026
What this calculator does
This inflation calculator estimates how a price or budget amount changes over time when inflation compounds year after year.
Inflation is one of the easiest planning factors to underestimate because the annual percentage often looks modest. Over long periods, however, those yearly increases materially reshape savings goals, retirement needs, and spending power.
The calculator shows both sides of the same effect: how much more something may cost in the future and how much less a fixed amount of money may buy.
This page is built for users who need a defensible planning answer, not just quick arithmetic. It translates "Amount today", "Annual inflation rate", and "Years" into "Future cost", "Future purchasing power", and "Price increase" so the trade-off is visible in one place instead of being hidden behind a single number.
How to use it
Enter the amount you want to analyze, the annual inflation rate, and the number of years.
Use the future cost figure when planning future expenses or required savings targets.
Use the purchasing power figure when checking how far a fixed nominal amount may stretch in the future.
Start with "Amount today", "Annual inflation rate", and "Years". Once the base case makes sense, compare one assumption at a time so you can see exactly what changes the outcome.
Formula
Future cost = Amount × (1 + inflation)^yearsPurchasing power = Amount ÷ (1 + inflation)^yearsThese formulas describe the same inflation effect from opposite directions: rising nominal prices and falling real purchasing power.
Methodology
Future cost is calculated by compounding the amount forward by the inflation rate for the selected number of years.
Purchasing power is calculated by discounting the amount by the same rate over the same horizon.
The yearly table makes the erosion visible rather than leaving the result as one abstract number.
The model maps "Amount today", "Annual inflation rate", and "Years" into "Future cost", "Future purchasing power", and "Price increase" using the formulas shown on the page. Keeping those relationships visible makes it easier to separate the core economics from the optional adjustments and to understand which assumption is actually moving the answer.
Worked example
An item that costs 1,000 today may cost materially more in ten years if inflation averages 3% each year.
That same example also shows why a cash balance sitting still in nominal terms quietly loses real buying power over time.
How to interpret the results
Future cost helps with goal setting. Purchasing power helps with real-value thinking when you already have a nominal amount in mind.
Inflation multiple shows how many times larger the future nominal price becomes relative to today’s amount.
Read "Future cost" first, then use the other summary cards, the chart, and the detailed table to judge contributions, growth, and future purchasing power. In most finance decisions, the best option is the one that stays strong across the full picture, not just the one with the most attractive first number.
Common mistakes
- Ignoring inflation when planning retirement or long-term savings goals.
- Using an unrealistically low inflation assumption for long horizons.
- Thinking of inflation as a one-time price jump rather than a compounding process.
Key terms
Quick definitions for the finance terms that matter on this page.
Purchasing power
The amount of goods or services a given amount of money can buy.
Real value
The value of money after adjusting for inflation.
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers on assumptions, interpretation, and the limits of each estimate.
Why does inflation matter so much over long periods?
Because inflation compounds. Small annual increases can add up to large cumulative changes over a decade or more.
Can this calculator predict actual future inflation?
No. It models a constant assumed rate so you can plan scenarios, not forecast exact future inflation.
Should I use current headline inflation?
Not necessarily. For long-term planning, a conservative long-run assumption is often more useful than a single recent reading.
Is future cost the same as required investment return?
No. Future cost shows how expenses may rise. Required return depends on your saving horizon, contributions, and risk tolerance.
Which inputs change "Future cost" the most?
Start with "Amount today", "Annual inflation rate", and "Years". Those assumptions usually drive "Future cost" far more than any optional adjustment. Once the base case is right, use advanced inputs only to reflect real fees, taxes, or timing differences.
What does "Future cost" tell me in practical terms?
"Future cost" is the fastest read on the outcome, but it should not be treated as the whole decision by itself. Use it as the headline number, then read the chart, table, and other summary cards to understand what is happening underneath.
Why should I look at "Future purchasing power" as well as "Future cost"?
Because "Future cost", "Future purchasing power", and "Price increase" answer different parts of the same decision. A scenario can look good on the first number and still be weak once timing, total cost, or long-run value is included.
Is the calculator still useful if I only have the main inputs?
Yes. This page is designed to produce a practical first estimate from the core inputs alone. You can refine the result later if you get better information about fees, taxes, or timing.
Does the chart add anything beyond the summary cards?
Yes. The chart shows how the result develops over time, which is often the real decision point. It is especially useful when two scenarios have a similar headline result but very different timing or cost patterns.
What is the detailed table useful for?
Use the table when you need the period-by-period breakdown behind the summary. That is usually where users spot front-loaded interest, a slow payoff path, a contribution gap, or the exact point where one scenario becomes better than another.
Should I compare more than one inflation scenario?
Yes. A base case and one stressed case usually give a much better planning view than a single run. Change one major assumption at a time so you can see what is actually responsible for the difference.
How should Switzerland users validate this result before acting?
Use the calculator as a planning tool, then confirm product fees, tax treatment, contribution timing, and inflation assumptions. Final product disclosures, local tax rules, and official documentation can move the real outcome away from the estimate.
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Important disclaimer
For Switzerland, confirm local treatment of product fees, tax treatment, contribution timing, and inflation assumptions before using the output for a final application, filing, or contract decision.