Inflation rate history · 2023
Inflation Rate in 2023
In 2023, US consumer prices rose 4.12% — the 21st-highest of the 65 years on record. Here's where that sits in 65 years of inflation, the story behind it, what 2023's money is worth today, and how it compares with the 2.95% of 2024.
- 2023 inflation rate 4.12% annual CPI
- vs prior year -3.88 pts from 8.00% in 2022
- vs today 2.95% in 2024
- 1960–2024 average 3.76% long-run norm
What happened to inflation in 2023
Inflation cooled sharply from its 2022 peak as supply chains healed and the Fed's rate hikes took hold.
In 2023, inflation ran at 4.12%, down from 8.00% in 2022. That made it the 21st-highest of the 65 years on record, and above the long-run average of 3.76%. For comparison, inflation sits at about 2.95% today.
What 2023's money is worth today
A rate is abstract until it's a price tag. Using the Consumer Price Index, here's what a given sum of 2023 dollars would have to grow to in order to buy the same goods today — the cumulative effect of every year of inflation in between:
Cumulative inflation since 2023 comes to about 3% — prices have risen roughly 1.0× over that span. Put another way, $100 today had the buying power of about $97 in 2023. To run your own figure across any two years, use the inflation calculator.
How 2023 compared
Across the full 1960–2024 record, inflation has averaged about 3.76%, so 2023 ran above that long-run norm. Within the 2020s, inflation averaged roughly 4.2%, and 2023 sat below its own decade. Five years earlier, in 2018, the rate was 2.44%. The following year, 2024, inflation eased to 2.95%.
Inflation shapes borrowing costs: when prices run hot, lenders demand higher rates to compensate. See what mortgage rates did in 2023 for the other side of the same story.
Inflation is only half of the "misery index" — the other half is joblessness. See how unemployment in 2023 compared, and what the two together meant for households.
This is one year out of the whole story. For the complete history — every year since 1960, the all-time high and the deflation low, the decade-by-decade view, and what drives inflation over time — see historical inflation rates, 1960–today.
Inflation in 2023 — FAQ
What was the inflation rate in 2023?
Consumer price inflation averaged 2023: 4.12%, based on the annual change in the Consumer Price Index. That was down 3.88 points from 8.00% the year before.
Was inflation high or low in 2023?
Measured against the full 1960–2024 record, 2023's 4.12% was the 21st-highest of the 65 years on record, and above the long-run average of 3.76%.
What is $100 from 2023 worth today?
Because of cumulative inflation, $100 in 2023 has the same buying power as about $103 today — prices have risen roughly 3% (about 1.0×) since then. Put another way, $100 today had the buying power of about $97 in 2023.
Why was inflation high in 2023?
Inflation cooled sharply from its 2022 peak as supply chains healed and the Fed's rate hikes took hold.
How does 2023 inflation compare with today?
In 2023, prices rose 4.12%, versus 2.95% in 2024 — a difference of 1.17 points. The long-run (1960–2024) average is 3.76%.