What is $5.00 from 1951 worth today?
$5.00 in 1951 is worth $61.91 in 2025, accounting for +1138.2% cumulative inflation.
$5.00 in 1951 is worth
$61.91
in 2025
+1138.2%
+3.46%/yr
How prices changed from 1951 to 2025
| Item | 1951 | 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gallon of gas | $0.27 | $3.17 | +1074% |
| Loaf of bread | $0.16 | $2.10 | +1213% |
| Movie ticket | $0.53 | $11.50 | +2070% |
| Annual college tuition (public) | $143 | $11,800 | +8152% |
Prices in 1951
| Item | Price in 1951 |
|---|---|
| Gallon of gas | $0.27 |
| Loaf of bread | $0.16 |
| Movie ticket | $0.53 |
| Annual college tuition (public) | $143 |
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Historical Context: Postwar Boom
The 1950s were a period of broad prosperity and moderate inflation. Returning veterans, rising wages, suburban expansion, and the baby boom fueled consumer demand. The Korean War brought a brief inflationary spike in 1950–51, but the Federal Reserve tightened policy to contain it. For most of the decade, annual inflation remained below 3%, supporting strong real wage growth and rising living standards.
The end of wartime controls unleashed a burst of inflation in 1946–48 as pent-up consumer demand met supply shortages. After that adjustment, the postwar boom settled into a long era of moderate inflation and strong real growth. The GI Bill, suburban expansion, a baby boom, and rising consumer spending drove prosperity. Inflation averaged around 2% per year through most of the 1950s and early 1960s.
What This Means
Over the 74 years from 1951 to 2025, prices increased more than fourfold — a cumulative inflation rate of +1138.2%. The average annual inflation rate over this period was +3.46%, which is roughly in line with the historical average of roughly 3.3% per year.
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