First Job Salary Inflation Calculator

First Job Salary Inflation Calculator 2026 | Adjusted for Today’s Dollars
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First Job Salary Inflation Calculator

Find out what your first job’s starting salary would be worth today after inflation, and see whether your current pay is a real raise or a real pay cut.

💵 CPI Adjusted
📈 Real Wage Growth
🕰️ Any Starting Year
📏 Accurate

Salary Inflation Adjustment

Enter your first job details to see what it’s worth in today’s dollars

💼 First Job Details

Your annual salary when you started that first job.

The year you began earning the starting salary above.

📅 Comparison Point

Usually the most recent full year, to see today’s equivalent value.

Enter your current salary to see if your raises have beaten inflation.

Your Inflation-Adjusted Salary

Today’s value, cumulative inflation, and real wage growth

💵

Enter your first job’s starting salary above and click Adjust For Inflation to see what it’s worth today.

A $20,000 Salary, Adjusted Over Time

A quick look at what a $20,000 starting salary from different decades would be worth in 2025 dollars, based on cumulative U.S. inflation.

Starting Year Original Salary Value in 2025 Dollars Cumulative Inflation

First Job Salary Inflation FAQ

Everything you need to know about adjusting old salaries for inflation and understanding real wage growth.

To adjust a first job salary for inflation, multiply the original salary by the ratio of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) in the comparison year to the CPI in the year you started that job. This shows what your starting pay would be worth in today’s purchasing power.

Prices rise over time due to inflation, so a dollar earned years ago bought more than a dollar earned today. Comparing raw salary numbers across different years without adjusting for inflation makes older salaries look artificially low, even if they had similar or greater purchasing power.

A nominal raise is simply the increase in the dollar amount of your paycheck. A real raise accounts for inflation, meaning your pay grew faster than the cost of living. If your salary increased but by less than inflation, you technically took a real pay cut even though the number on your paycheck went up.

This calculator uses annual average U.S. Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) figures to estimate inflation between two years. Figures for the most recent year are estimates and may be revised once final annual data is published.

CPI is the most widely used general measure of inflation and a reasonable benchmark for personal salary comparisons, but it tracks a broad basket of consumer goods and services rather than wages in your specific industry, so it is an estimate rather than an exact personal inflation rate.

This depends entirely on the year you started working. Enter your starting year into the calculator above to see the cumulative inflation multiplier and percentage increase in the cost of living between then and today.

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