Inflation Calculator

US Inflation from 2011 to 2025

US inflation from 2011 to 2025 was +43.1%. $100 in 2011 had the same purchasing power as $143.12 in 2025 (avg. +2.59%/yr).

$100.00 in 2011 is worth

$143.12

in 2025

Cumulative inflation

+43.1%

Avg. annual rate

+2.59%/yr

How prices changed from 2011 to 2025

Item20112025Change
Gallon of gas$3.53$3.17−10%
Loaf of bread$1.41$2.10+49%
New home (median)$267,900$430,000+61%
Median household income$50,054$85,000+70%
Movie ticket$7.93$11.50+45%
Annual college tuition (public)$8,244$11,800+43%

What Drove Inflation from 2011 to 2025

Financial Crisis: The collapse of the US housing bubble triggered a global financial crisis of historic proportions. As mortgage-backed securities lost value and interbank lending froze, the Federal Reserve slashed rates to zero and deployed emergency lending facilities. The economy contracted sharply in 2008–09, and deflationary pressures emerged as credit collapsed and unemployment surged toward 10%. Massive fiscal stimulus and quantitative easing gradually stabilized conditions, but recovery was painfully slow.

Low Inflation: The post-crisis recovery was characterized by historically low inflation despite extraordinary monetary stimulus. The Federal Reserve kept rates near zero until 2015, expanded its balance sheet to $4.5 trillion through quantitative easing, yet consistently undershot its 2% inflation target. Labor market slack, globalization, technology-driven price competition, and weak wage growth all contributed to the persistently low inflation environment that puzzled economists throughout the decade.

COVID & Post-COVID: The COVID-19 pandemic caused the sharpest economic contraction since the Great Depression, followed by an unprecedented policy response. Trillions in fiscal stimulus and near-zero interest rates fueled rapid recovery, but supply chains remained severely disrupted. Surging demand meeting constrained supply produced the highest inflation in 40 years by mid-2021. The Federal Reserve began hiking rates in March 2022 at the fastest pace since Volcker, gradually bringing inflation down from its peak above 9%.

Understanding the Numbers

Over these 14 years, prices rose significantly — a total inflation rate of +43.1%. The annualized rate of +2.59% per year was roughly in line with the historical average of roughly 3.3% per year.

Compare Other Periods

Starting from 2011:

Ending in 2025: