Inflation in Australia (2010–2025)
This page estimates how inflation in Australia changed purchasing power from 2010 to 2025. Because inflation compounds, long ranges can show large differences.
For example, A$1,000 in 2010 is equivalent to approximately A$1,470 in 2025. That implies an inflation shortfall of A$470 (32.0%) over the period.
CPI index: 88.8 (2010) → 130.5 (2025) • factor 1.470×
This is a period-level estimate. Inflation affects categories differently (housing, food, energy, services), so your personal experience may vary. The CPI ratio is a useful high-level way to compare “then vs now” purchasing power in Australia.
Australia inflation loss (2010–2025)
See how inflation changes purchasing power over time. Compare two years using CPI ratios to estimate the inflation-adjusted equivalent amount, the inflation shortfall, and the cumulative inflation factor.
Each point shows the CPI-adjusted value in 2010 prices. Lower values indicate less purchasing power.
CPI values vary by source and methodology. This site uses locally stored CPI series and the formula in docs/DATA_MODEL.md.
Key insights for Australia (2010–2025)
- Total inflation (CPI): 47.0%.
- Annualized inflation rate: 2.6% per year.
Largest YoY CPI increases (top 3):
- 2023: +2.7% YoY
- 2022: +2.7% YoY
- 2017: +2.7% YoY
CPI-based estimates; year-to-year values can be volatile.
Country context
Data coverage and source details for the CPI series used on this page.
Related ranges
Popular amounts
FAQ
Answers to common questions about CPI-based inflation loss estimates.
How much inflation occurred in Australia from 2010 to 2025?
The calculator uses the CPI ratio between the two years to estimate the cumulative change in prices over the period.
What does “equivalent amount” mean on this page?
Equivalent amount estimates what your start-year amount would be in end-year prices (same currency), using CPI ratios.
Is the result guaranteed to match my personal spending?
No. CPI measures average consumer price changes. Individual experiences vary depending on spending patterns and local prices.