Inflation & buying power
$10,000 in 2000 is worth how much today?
$10,000 in 2000 has the same buying power as about $19,461 today (May 2026). Prices have risen roughly 95% since 2000 — an average of about 2.6% a year.
What this means
$10,000 in 2000 — during the 2000s — stretched a lot further than it does now. To match that same buying power today you'd need about $19,461, because everyday prices have climbed about 95% in the 26 years since.
Put another way, today's dollar buys what about $0.51 bought in 2000.
The inflation behind the number
- Total inflation since 2000: about 95%.
- Average annual inflation: about 2.6% per year.
- Time span: 26 years (2000 → 2026).
- Source: CPI-U (CPIAUCNS), U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics via FRED.
$10,000 in other years, worth today
| $10,000 in… | Worth today |
|---|---|
| 1950 | $139,246 |
| 1970 | $86,316 |
| 1980 | $40,666 |
| 1990 | $25,649 |
| 2000 | $19,461 |
| 2010 | $15,369 |
| 2020 | $12,949 |
Frequently asked questions
$10,000 in 2000 is worth how much today?
$10,000 in 2000 has the same buying power as about $19,461 in May 2026. That reflects roughly 95% total inflation since 2000.
Why is $10,000 from 2000 worth more today?
Prices have risen over time (inflation), so it takes more dollars now to buy what $10,000 bought in 2000. The increase averages about 2.6% per year over 26 years.
How is this calculated?
We multiply the original amount by the ratio of today's Consumer Price Index (CPI-U) to the CPI in the original year, using official data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics via FRED.