Inflation calculator for MX$1,000 in Mexico
What is MX$1,000 worth today in Mexico? Use this CPI-based calculator to estimate cumulative inflation, equivalent amount, and inflation shortfall. No exchange rates.
Coverage starts in 2000 and runs through 2025.
MX$1,000 in 2000 is about MX$3,027 in 2025 (CPI inflation 202.7%).
MX$1,000 in Mexico (inflation-adjusted)
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.
CPI values vary by source and methodology. This site uses locally stored CPI series and the formula in docs/DATA_MODEL.md. CPI value for 2025 are provisional (World Bank CPI with IMF WEO inflation projection) and may be revised.
What is MX$1,000 worth today in Mexico?
This page estimates the CPI-adjusted equivalent for MX$1,000. Use it to compare purchasing power between years in Mexico.
- MX$1,000 in 2000 is about MX$3,027 in 2025.
- MX$1,000 in 2010 is about MX$1,916 in 2025.
Mexico inflation rate calculator (CPI)
To explore different scenarios, change the years in the calculator. Shorter ranges often show smaller changes, while multi-decade ranges can compound substantially.
Key inflation insights for Mexico
Period: 2000–2025 (based on the CPI series used on this page).
- Total inflation (CPI): 202.7%.
- Annualized inflation rate: 4.5% per year.
Largest YoY CPI increases (top 3):
- 2022: +7.9% YoY
- 2001: +6.3% YoY
- 2017: +6.0% YoY
CPI-based estimates; year-to-year values can be volatile.
Country contextTap to expand
Country context
Data coverage and source details for the CPI series used on this page.
CPI value for 2025 is provisional (World Bank CPI with IMF WEO inflation projection) and may be revised.
FAQTap to expand
FAQ
Answers to common questions about CPI-based inflation loss estimates.
What is MX$1,000 worth today in Mexico?
Use the calculator to pick a start year and end year. The equivalent amount output estimates end-year prices using CPI ratios.
Does this include investment returns or interest?
No. This is an inflation-only adjustment using CPI. It does not model savings rates, investment returns, taxes, or wages.
Why are there dedicated amount pages?
These pages prefill common amounts to make it easier to compare time periods and to provide country-specific examples and FAQs.