Inflation Calculator

US Inflation from 2014 to 2025

US inflation from 2014 to 2025 was +36.0%. $100 in 2014 had the same purchasing power as $135.99 in 2025 (avg. +2.83%/yr).

$100.00 in 2014 is worth

$135.99

in 2025

Cumulative inflation

+36.0%

Avg. annual rate

+2.83%/yr

How prices changed from 2014 to 2025

Item20142025Change
Gallon of gas$3.37$3.17−6%
Loaf of bread$1.54$2.10+36%
New home (median)$281,500$430,000+53%
Median household income$53,657$85,000+58%
Movie ticket$8.17$11.50+41%
Annual college tuition (public)$9,312$11,800+27%

What Drove Inflation from 2014 to 2025

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 11 years, prices rose significantly — a total inflation rate of +36.0%. The annualized rate of +2.83% per year was roughly in line with the historical average of roughly 3.3% per year.

Compare Other Periods

Starting from 2014:

Ending in 2025: