Free inflation impact on savings calculator. See how inflation erodes your purchasing power over time and whether your savings rate keeps up with rising prices.
The Inflation Impact on Savings Calculator reveals the hidden cost of rising prices on your money. Enter your savings balance, interest rate, and an expected inflation rate to see the difference between your nominal balance and your real purchasing power over time.
Even when your savings account earns interest, inflation can silently eat away at what your money can actually buy. A 4% savings rate with 3% inflation gives you only a 1% real return. This calculator makes that erosion visible with clear, year-by-year projections.
Use this tool to understand the true value of your savings, evaluate whether your current rate adequately protects your purchasing power, and make better decisions about savings versus investing. A savings account earning 4% APY sounds healthy, but if inflation is running at 3.5%, your real return is barely half a percent. Over decades, this erosion compounds and can cut the purchasing power of your savings by a third or more. This calculator shows exactly how much ground you lose so you can decide when to shift funds toward higher-return investments.
Most people focus on nominal returns and overlook the corrosive effect of inflation. This calculator bridges that gap by showing you the real (inflation-adjusted) value of your savings. If your savings rate is below inflation, you are effectively losing money even though your balance grows. Knowing this empowers you to seek better returns or allocate funds more strategically.
Nominal FV = PV × (1 + APY)^t Real value = Nominal FV / (1 + inflation)^t Purchasing power lost = Nominal FV – Real value Real return rate ≈ ((1 + APY) / (1 + inflation)) – 1 where PV = current balance, t = years
Result: Purchasing power lost: $18,680
A $50,000 balance at 4.0% APY grows nominally to $74,012 in 10 years. However, adjusting for 3.0% annual inflation, the real purchasing power of that amount is only $55,332 in today's dollars. You lose $18,680 in purchasing power compared to the nominal balance. Your effective real return is only about 0.97% per year.
Inflation is often called the silent thief because it works gradually and invisibly. Your bank balance shows a growing number, which feels like progress. But if prices are rising faster than your interest earnings, you can actually buy less over time despite having more dollars. This psychological disconnect is why so many people underestimate inflation's impact.
Financial advisors emphasize real returns — your return after subtracting inflation — because nominal returns can be misleading. A 5% savings rate sounds great until you learn inflation is 4.5%, leaving you with only a 0.5% real return. When evaluating any savings or investment option, always calculate the real return first.
The solution is not to abandon savings accounts entirely. Emergency funds, short-term goals (under 3 years), and capital you cannot afford to lose belong in safe, liquid accounts even if inflation erodes some value. The goal is to minimize the amount held in low-yield savings and direct the surplus toward investments that historically outpace inflation.
Purchasing power is the real value of your money in terms of what it can buy. If prices rise 3% per year, $100 today buys only about $97 worth of goods next year. Over many years, this erosion compounds significantly.
If your APY is lower than the inflation rate, then yes — your purchasing power is declining even as your nominal balance grows. For example, a 2% APY during 3% inflation means you lose about 1% of real value per year.
For general planning, 3% is a reasonable long-term average for the US. For short-term projections, use the current CPI-reported inflation rate. For conservative planning, use 3.5–4% to account for potential spikes.
Inflation means you need significantly more money in the future to maintain today's standard of living. A goal of $100,000 in today's dollars requires about $134,000 in nominal terms after 10 years of 3% inflation. Always set savings targets in inflation-adjusted terms.
No. Savings accounts still serve important purposes: emergency funds, short-term goals, and capital preservation. The key is to keep only the amount you need for these purposes in savings, and invest the rest for higher returns that outpace inflation.
Historically, stocks (7–10% average), real estate (4–7%), and I-Bonds (inflation-matched) have outpaced inflation. Diversified index funds are the most common way to beat inflation long-term while managing risk. However, all investments carry varying levels of risk unlike FDIC-insured savings.