Inflation-Adjusted Value

Tax Planning
Updated Apr 2026 Has calculator

The real purchasing-power equivalent of a future dollar amount in today's dollars.

Tax laws change annually and vary by country. The information on this page is for educational purposes only. Always verify figures with current official sources (IRS, HMRC, CRA, ATO) and consult a qualified tax professional before making any tax-related decision.

What is Inflation-Adjusted Value?

Inflation-adjusted value (also called real value or present purchasing power) converts a future nominal dollar amount into today's dollars by discounting it at the expected inflation rate. Because inflation erodes purchasing power over time, a dollar received in the future is worth less than a dollar today. This conversion is essential when evaluating long-term investment returns, retirement income needs, and the real cost of debt. Real value = Future Value ÷ (1 + inflation rate)^years.

Formula

Real Value = Future Value ÷ (1 + Inflation Rate)^Years

Worked Example

Worked example — Retirement planning — $1M in 30 years

2025

Step 1  Target retirement nest egg: $1,000,000 in 30 years
Step 2  Assumed annual inflation rate: 3.0% (US historical average)
Step 3  Real value = $1,000,000 ÷ (1.03)^30
Step 4  Real value = $1,000,000 ÷ 2.427 ≈ $411,987 in today's dollars
Step 5  → $1M in 30 years buys only what $412K buys today

Source: BLS — CPI Historical Data, 1925–2024 (2025-01-01)

Calculate Inflation-Adjusted Value

Nominal amount you expect to have or need in the future

Expected average annual inflation (US historical avg: ~3%)

Years from now until you receive or spend the future amount

Today's Dollar Value

Not investment advice.

How to Interpret Inflation-Adjusted Value

< 25000
Severely eroded — most purchasing power lost
25000 – 60000
Significantly eroded — substantial real loss
60000 – 85000
Moderately eroded — typical 10–20 year horizon
> 85000
Mostly preserved — short horizon or low inflation