GeraCash / US Inflation Calculator / 2006
What is $100 in 2006 worth today?
$100 in 2006 has the same buying power as $159.70 in 2025 — a 59.7% increase, or about 2.5% per year on average. Figures come from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index (CPI-U, all items). Change the amount or year below.
What is $100 in 2006 worth today?
$100 in 2006 has the same buying power as $159.70 in 2025 — US consumer prices rose 59.7% over 19 years (about 2.5% per year on average), measured by the BLS Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U, all items, 1982-84=100; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, public domain).
$100 in 2006 →
$159.70
in 2025 money
Total price change
+59.7%
over 19 years
Average annual inflation
2.5%
compound, per year
Value of the dollar from 2006
Pre-set to 2006 → 2025. Change the amount or either year (1986–2025) to recalculate with the real BLS CPI-U index.
US dollars
1986–2025
1986–2025
$100.00 in 2006 is worth
$159.70
in 2025 money
Total price change
+59.7%
over 19 years — prices rose
Average annual inflation
2.5%
compound, per year
This converts nominal US dollars between years using the BLS Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U, all items). It reflects average US consumer-price inflation and is not financial advice — your personal cost of living depends on what you buy.
How $100 from 2006 grew over time
| Year | Value of $100 from 2006 | Cumulative change |
|---|---|---|
| 2011 | $111.58 | 11.6% |
| 2016 | $119.06 | 19.1% |
| 2025 | $159.70 | 59.7% |
Value of the dollar since 2006: FAQ
- How much is $100 from 2006 worth in 2025?
- $100 in 2006 is worth $159.70 in 2025 on the BLS CPI-U index — a total price increase of 59.7% over 19 years. The calculation is $100 × index(2025) ÷ index(2006) = $100 × 321.9 ÷ 201.6.
- What was the average inflation rate from 2006 to 2025?
- US consumer prices rose about 2.5% per year on average between 2006 and 2025, compounding to a total increase of 59.7%. This is the annualised change in the BLS CPI-U annual-average index (all items, 1982-84=100).
- Why has the dollar lost value since 2006?
- Because of sustained inflation: when average prices rise year after year, each dollar buys fewer goods and services. To match the buying power of $1 in 2006 you would need $1.60 in 2025. Inflation since 2006 reflects the cumulative change in the BLS CPI-U, the U.S. headline price index.
- Where does this figure come from?
- From the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI-U series (CUUR0000SA0, all items, U.S. city average, 1982-84=100), using published annual-average index values. BLS data is a U.S. Government work in the public domain. No figures are estimated — the value is computed directly from the index ratio between 2006 and 2025.
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Data source
Contains public sector information published by U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and licensed under the U.S. Government work — public domain. Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) (2026 MAY).
BLS series: CPI-U, U.S. city average, all items, not seasonally adjusted (CUUR0000SA0), 1982-84=100; annual average (M13). Retrieved 2026-06-27. Value computed by Gera as $100 × index(2025) ÷ index(2006) — no figures are estimated.