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All long-term saving and investing tools in one place – compound interest, monthly and annual views. Pick the calculator that matches your question.
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1 ToolInflation Is the Tax No One Sees on the Paycheck
The pay stub lists federal income tax, FICA, Medicare, state tax, and any retirement contribution. What isn't on the stub costs more over the long run than several of those line items combined: inflation. It isn't deducted, it's eroded — from whatever sits on the account at the end of the month. Someone earning $5,000 net per month in early 2022 ended the year with real purchasing power equivalent to about $4,550, without a single line on the stub changing.
This section covers money decisions with the invisible variable: what inflation actually consumes, how real returns work, what the official statistic leaves out, what $100 from 30 years ago is worth today, and which three protection layers hold up against the erosion. The concrete calculators for saving (compound interest) and the workplace (meeting cost) live in the sub-areas.
Why 2% Savings at 5% Inflation Is Actually Minus 3%
A high-yield savings account paying 2% looks like growth — $10,000 becomes $10,200 over the year. With inflation at 5% (where the US CPI ran in 2022 and parts of 2023), you'd need $10,500 at year-end to buy the same goods you could afford at the start. The $300 gap is the real loss. The bank shows "+2%"; reality shows "−3%."
The effect compounds. With a nominal 2% return and real inflation of 5% across ten years, the balance loses about 26% of purchasing power — even though the on-screen number grew to 1.22× its original value. Anyone who "parks money safely" and feels reassured by the growing balance is watching an optical illusion. The Fed's stated inflation target is 2% — any savings rate below that is, by definition, a real loss.
Real vs Nominal Returns — the Only Number That Counts
What the bank prints on the statement is the nominal rate. What actually happens to wealth is the real rate. The math is simple: real rate ≈ nominal rate − inflation rate. More precisely: real rate = ((1 + nominal) ÷ (1 + inflation)) − 1. For most daily decisions, simple subtraction is close enough.
Two examples from recent years:
- 2022, average HYSA: 0.5% nominal rate, 8.0% CPI inflation in the US (BLS) → about −7.5% real per year. Anyone holding $50,000 in a basic savings account that year lost roughly $3,750 in purchasing power.
- 2024, 12-month CD: 5.0% nominal rate, 2.9% inflation → about +2.0% real per year. The first stretch in over a decade where straightforward saving meant real growth.
Rule of thumb: as long as the nominal yield sits above the inflation rate, wealth builds in real terms. The moment it dips below, wealth shrinks — even as the account balance grows. Anyone not running this comparison is optimizing the wrong number.
What the Statistic Leaves Out
The official inflation rate (Consumer Price Index, CPI, in the US; HICP in the Eurozone) is calculated from a weighted basket of goods. The basket is updated periodically and weighted by average consumption. The problem: nobody consumes exactly that average. Three areas reliably produce personal inflation above the headline number:
- Big-city rent burden. The CPI "shelter" weighting reflects average rent increases across the existing housing stock. New renters in San Francisco, New York, Seattle, or Boston routinely pay 30 to 60% more than the long-term tenant next door — a personal inflation shock that the official statistic doesn't capture.
- Energy and food. In 2022, the US Energy CPI index rose by over 25%, the Food at Home index by about 11% — against a headline CPI of 8.0%. Anyone spending an above-average share on utilities and groceries (families, lower-income households) experienced personal inflation closer to 10 to 12%.
- Shrinkflation. The price stays, the package shrinks. P&G, Unilever, Mondelēz, and Frito-Lay have all reduced hundreds of product sizes by 10 to 25% over recent years — at unchanged prices. The CPI captures package-size changes with a lag. Consumer Reports and the BLS itself have documented dozens of cases.
In practice, perceived inflation runs several percentage points above the official number for most people — not because the gut is wrong, but because the personal basket is weighted differently.
30 Years of Inflation — What $100 from 1996 Buys Today
A $100 bill from 1996, kept neatly in a drawer through 2026, now has the purchasing power of roughly $48 in 1996 terms. The number on the bill hasn't changed. What's changed is the world the number describes — the loaf of bread, the electric bill, the monthly rent.
Cumulative US inflation between 1996 and 2026 is around 105 to 110% per BLS CPI data. Put differently: to buy the same basket of goods today that $100 bought in 1996 requires about $210 now. A wealth of $100,000 invested in 1996 and nominally doubled to $200,000 by today would be approximately flat in real terms — the nominal growth was exactly the inflation offset.
The same $100,000 invested in a broad-market index fund tracking the S&P 500 over those 30 years (historically about 9 to 10% nominal annual return, or roughly 6 to 7% real after inflation) would now sit at approximately $1.3 million nominal — and around $620,000 real. That's the gap between "keeping money safe" and "building wealth": both strategies move numbers, but only one moves purchasing power.
Where Inflation Stops Hurting — the Three Protection Layers
Nothing protects fully against inflation. But a tiered system absorbs the erosion at different time horizons:
- Layer 1 — High-yield savings for everyday liquidity (3 to 6 months of expenses). Here the inflation loss is the accepted cost of liquidity. HYSAs from Ally, Marcus, Wealthfront, or Capital One in 2026 sit between 3 and 4.5% — often below the inflation rate, but the money is accessible within hours.
- Layer 2 — CDs and Treasury bonds for mid-range reserves (6 months to 3 years). Multi-year CDs and Treasury notes typically pay 0.5 to 1 percentage point more than top HYSAs. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) tie the yield directly to CPI and effectively guarantee preservation of purchasing power — issued regularly by the US Treasury and available through TreasuryDirect or brokerage accounts.
- Layer 3 — Stock-index ETFs for long horizons (5+ years). Broad-market ETFs tracking the S&P 500, MSCI World, or FTSE All-World have historically returned 8 to 10% nominal per year long-term — or about 5 to 7% real after inflation. Over multi-decade horizons, that's the only well-documented method for real wealth growth. Providers like Vanguard, BlackRock (iShares), and Charles Schwab offer suitable ETFs starting at 0.03% annual expense ratio.
Real assets (real estate, gold) are also commonly cited as inflation hedges — real estate ties to price levels via rent, and gold has historically preserved purchasing power across very long stretches. Both come with their own risks (concentration in a single property, high gold volatility) and don't belong in the same drawer as the three liquidity layers above.
When the Calculators Come In
This page covers the invisible variable — inflation as the backdrop to every money decision. The concrete math for the two most common fields lives in dedicated sub-areas:
- Savings & Investment. How compound interest turns small contributions into significant sums over decades — and how starting early outweighs contributing more later. The compound interest calculator compares both effects directly.
- Workplace. What a 60-minute meeting with five senior people actually costs — and how those invisible costs add up across the year. The meeting cost calculator makes it concrete.
Common Questions About Inflation and Money Value
Topic Areas
- Savings & Investment – compound interest, contribution amount, and the leverage time has over rate.
- Workplace – meeting costs and other invisible hour-accumulations in a company.
- Sustainability – carbon calculators that often surface hidden lifetime cost categories.
- Building & DIY – material quantities when a renovation needs a budget.
- All categories – every calculator on the site at a glance.