Inflation adjust amount
ClientSee what a historical price might equal after steady inflation.
How to use
Enter amount|years|annualInflationPercent.
About Inflation adjust amount
Adjust a past dollar amount by inflation rate to today's dollars—local. The interactive transform on this page runs in your browser tab—Toolcore does not need your paste for the core operation described above.
How to use this page
Paste or type in the main workspace, run the primary action from the toolbar, then copy or download the result. Use Load example when the page offers it, or URL prefill (?q= / ?qb=) so agents and tickets open the same input.
$100.00 10 yr ago ≈ $134.39 today at 3.00% annual inflation
Nearby workflows on Toolcore
- Percent change — Calculate percentage increase or decrease from an old value to a new one—local math in your browser. when units or numeric output should be checked on a related calculator.
- Compound interest calculator — Principal, APR, and compounding—future value, interest earned, and APY for savings-style growth. when units or numeric output should be checked on a related calculator.
- ROI percentage — Return on investment from final value and initial cost. when units or numeric output should be checked on a related calculator.
- Rule of 72 — Estimate years to double an investment from an annual rate using the rule of 72—browser-only. when units or numeric output should be checked on a related calculator.
Common use cases
- Compare decade-old salaries to today.
- Rough CPI what-if scenarios.
Common mistakes to avoid
Actual CPI
Uses your single average rate, not official CPI tables.
FAQ
Deflation?
Negative inflation % reduces the adjusted amount.
More tools
Related utilities you can open in another tab—mostly client-side.
Percent change
ClientCalculate percentage increase or decrease from an old value to a new one—local math in your browser.
Compound interest calculator
ClientPrincipal, APR, and compounding—future value, interest earned, and APY for savings-style growth.
ROI percentage
ClientReturn on investment from final value and initial cost.
Rule of 72
ClientEstimate years to double an investment from an annual rate using the rule of 72—browser-only.