See the real impact of inflation on your savings. Calculate how much purchasing power you're losing every year.
₹4,33,491
43.3% purchasing power destroyed
₹5,66,509
What it can actually buy
6.0%
Long-term average (India)
The gap between lines shows how much wealth is silently destroyed by inflation
Inflation is the silent thief. While your bank balance shows the same number, what that money can buy shrinks every single year. A car that costs ₹5,00,000 today will cost ₹8,83,286 in 10 years.
Your salary might increase 5% annually, but if inflation is at 6%, you're actually losing ground. That "raise" is an illusion. Bank savings accounts offering 3-4% interest are guaranteeing you lose money in real terms.
The purchasing power destruction is permanent. Money you don't invest or protect today will buy significantly less tomorrow. This isn't speculation—it's mathematical certainty based on historical averages.
The Reserve Bank of India targets 4% inflation, but real-world inflation (especially in food, fuel, and education) often exceeds 6%. Housing costs in metros have grown 8-10% annually over the past decade.
A middle-class education that cost ₹50,000/year in 2010 now costs ₹2,00,000+. Healthcare inflation is even worse. Cash savings and traditional FDs cannot keep pace with these realities.
⚠️ This is not financial advice. Consult a qualified advisor.
Inflation-beating instruments typically include: Equity markets, real estate, inflation-indexed bonds, commodities, and diversified mutual funds. Historical data shows these have outpaced inflation over long periods.
Tax considerations matter: Capital gains tax, indexation benefits, and tax-saving instruments can significantly impact real returns. Factor these into your planning.
Time is your weapon: The earlier you start protecting your money, the less damage inflation can do. Waiting even 2-3 years costs you exponentially.
No. This calculator uses long-term historical averages. Actual inflation varies yearly—sometimes 2%, sometimes 8%+. We use averages for realistic long-term planning, not short-term speculation.
Rarely. Average salary growth might match or slightly exceed inflation, but individual expenses (healthcare, education, housing) often inflate faster than the Consumer Price Index. Real wealth building requires investment returns, not just salary.
Cash is the safest way to guarantee losing money. While your banknotes stay intact, their purchasing power erodes daily. Cash and low-interest savings are only suitable for emergency funds, not long-term wealth.
The Consumer Price Index averages all goods and services, but your personal inflation depends on what you buy. If you spend heavily on education or healthcare (high inflation categories), your real inflation is much higher than official CPI numbers.