What Is the Inflation Impact Calculator?
An inflation impact calculator shows how much a future savings goal will really be worth in today's dollars. That matters for planning big purchases, education, or retirement, where inflation quietly raises the nominal amount you will need.
How to use this calculator
Type your numbers into the fields above. The results change the moment you edit any input, so you can try one scenario after another and see exactly what moves. Most calculators show a short summary of the key figures, a line-by-line breakdown underneath, and β where it applies β a year-by-year schedule you can export to a spreadsheet. Everything runs in your browser; nothing is stored or sent anywhere. Treat the output as a planning estimate, not as final word on a real decision.
The Formula
Real value today = future goal Γ· (1 + inflation rate)^(years). The difference between the nominal goal and this real value is the purchasing power erosion caused by inflation over the period.
Worked Example
A $50,000 goal 15 years from now at 3% inflation is worth only about $32,000 in today's purchasing power. To actually buy the same thing later, you would need to save more or invest to outpace inflation.
Tips for the Most Accurate Estimate
- Inflation-proof goals by investing, not hoarding cash.
- Use 2β3% as a baseline long-run assumption.
- Apply it to tuition, home, and retirement targets.
- Revisit goals as inflation expectations shift.
- Pair with a compound-growth plan to close the gap.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why does my goal lose value?
Because prices rise over time, so a fixed future dollar amount buys less than it would today. The calculator discounts the goal by inflation.
Q: How do I protect the goal?
Invest the savings in assets expected to return more than inflation, so the balance grows in real terms.
Q: Is 3% the right rate?
It is a common long-run US assumption, but periods of higher inflation require a higher input for accurate planning.