Inflation Calculation Formula India – Every Formula You Need
Understanding the mathematical formulas behind inflation empowers you to verify financial data, calculate real returns, and plan for future purchasing power. Every formula below uses CPI data published by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MOSPI). Apply them instantly using our CPI Inflation Calculator.
1. CPI Inflation Rate Formula
The core formula measures the percentage change in the Consumer Price Index between two periods. India uses CPI-Combined (Urban + Rural) with base year 2012 = 100.
CPI in 2012 (base): 100
CPI in 2024: 195 (approx.)
Inflation: (195 − 100) ÷ 100 × 100 = 95% total inflation over 12 years
This means goods costing ₹100 in 2012 cost approximately ₹195 in 2024.
2. Purchasing Power Formula
This formula calculates how much your money will be worth in the future after inflation erodes it. Essential for retirement and goal planning.
Amount: ₹1,00,000 | Inflation: 6% | Duration: 10 years
Real value: ₹1,00,000 ÷ (1.06)^10 = ₹1,00,000 ÷ 1.7908 = ₹55,839
Your ₹1 lakh will buy only ₹55,839 worth of goods in 10 years.
Try this with any amount using our Purchasing Power Calculator.
3. Future Cost Formula (Inflation-Adjusted Goal)
The reverse of purchasing power – this tells you what something will cost in the future. Critical for planning education, marriage, or retirement expenses.
Current cost: ₹10,00,000 | Education inflation: 10% | Duration: 15 years
Future cost: ₹10,00,000 × (1.10)^15 = ₹10,00,000 × 4.177 = ₹41,77,000
Start a SIP today – use the SIP Calculator to find the monthly amount needed.
4. CAGR (Average Annual Inflation Rate)
Inflation varies year to year. The Compound Annual Growth Rate smooths this into a single “average” rate – useful for comparing periods or making long-term projections.
CPI Start: 100 | CPI End: 195 | Years: 12
CAGR: (195 ÷ 100) ^ (1/12) − 1 = (1.95)^0.0833 − 1 = 5.7% average annual inflation
Calculate CAGR for any investment using our CAGR Calculator.
5. Rule of 72 (Mental Math Shortcut)
A quick mental math formula to estimate how many years it takes for prices to double (or purchasing power to halve). Remarkably accurate for rates between 4–12%.
| Inflation Rate | Prices Double In | Purchasing Power Halves In |
|---|---|---|
| 4% | 18 years | 18 years |
| 5% | 14.4 years | 14.4 years |
| 6% | 12 years | 12 years |
| 7% | 10.3 years | 10.3 years |
| 8% | 9 years | 9 years |
| 10% | 7.2 years | 7.2 years |
| 12% | 6 years | 6 years |
Learn more about this powerful concept in our guide on Rule of 72 and Inflation.
6. Real Rate of Return (Fisher Equation)
The most important formula for investors. It strips inflation from your investment returns to show the actual increase in purchasing power.
Approximate: 7% − 5% = ~2% real return
Fisher (precise): ((1.07) ÷ (1.05)) − 1 = 1.01905 − 1 = 1.9% real return
After 30% tax bracket, FD yields 4.9% – making the real return −0.1% (negative). You’re losing money. See this in action with our FD Calculator.
Compare real returns across instruments using our Real Returns Calculator.
7. Cost Inflation Index (CII) for Capital Gains Tax
The Income Tax Department publishes an annual Cost Inflation Index number. It is used to inflation-adjust the purchase price of assets when calculating long-term capital gains tax – directly reducing your tax liability.
Purchase price: ₹40,00,000 | Sale price: ₹1,20,00,000
CII 2014-15: 240 | CII 2024-25: 363
Indexed cost: ₹40,00,000 × (363 ÷ 240) = ₹40,00,000 × 1.5125 = ₹60,50,000
LTCG: ₹1,20,00,000 − ₹60,50,000 = ₹59,50,000 (vs ₹80 lakh without indexation)
Indexation saved ₹20.5 lakh in taxable gains. Use our Capital Gains Calculator for your assets.
8. Salary Real Growth Formula
Did your last salary hike actually beat inflation? This formula tells you whether you are richer or poorer in real terms.
Real growth: ((1.08) ÷ (1.06)) − 1 = 1.0189 − 1 = 1.89% real increase
An 8% hike sounds great, but only 1.89% is actual purchasing power gain. Check yours with our Salary Hike Calculator.
Why CPI (Not WPI) is Used for Personal Finance in India
India tracks two major price indices, but they serve different purposes:
| Feature | CPI (Consumer Price Index) | WPI (Wholesale Price Index) |
|---|---|---|
| Measures | Retail prices (what you pay) | Wholesale/producer prices |
| Covers | 299 items including services | 697 commodities (no services) |
| Published by | MOSPI | Office of Economic Adviser |
| Base year | 2012 = 100 | 2011-12 = 100 |
| Used for | RBI monetary policy, personal finance | Industrial pricing, B2B contracts |
| Food weight | 45.86% (reflects household spending) | 24.38% |
The RBI formally adopted CPI as its inflation targeting benchmark in 2016 (flexible inflation targeting framework), with a target of 4% ±2%. For personal financial planning, always use CPI. Learn more in our article on CPI vs WPI Inflation.
Pro tip: Bookmark our Historical CPI Data page for quick access to CPI values from 1960 to present – useful for plugging into any of these formulas manually.
Inflation Formula Questions Answered
The inflation formula is: ((CPI in End Period – CPI in Start Period) / CPI in Start Period) × 100. This calculates the percentage change in the Consumer Price Index over a specific period. India uses CPI-Combined (Urban + Rural) published by MOSPI as the primary measure.
CPI (Consumer Price Index) measures retail price changes that directly affect household budgets, covering 299 items across food, housing, fuel, clothing, and services. WPI (Wholesale Price Index) tracks wholesale prices relevant to businesses. The Reserve Bank of India adopted CPI as its inflation targeting benchmark in 2016 because it better reflects the actual cost of living for Indian citizens.
The Rule of 72 is a mental math shortcut: divide 72 by the inflation rate to estimate how many years it takes for prices to double (or purchasing power to halve). At 6% inflation, prices double in approximately 12 years (72 ÷ 6 = 12). At 8% inflation, doubling takes about 9 years.
The approximate formula is: Real Return = Nominal Return – Inflation Rate. For precision, use the Fisher Equation: Real Return = ((1 + Nominal Return) / (1 + Inflation Rate)) – 1. For example, if your FD earns 7% and inflation is 5%, the approximate real return is 2%, but the precise Fisher calculation gives 1.9%.
The Cost Inflation Index (CII) is a number published annually by the Income Tax Department that reflects inflation. It is used to adjust the purchase price of assets for capital gains tax calculation. The formula is: Indexed Cost = Original Cost × (CII of Sale Year / CII of Purchase Year). This reduces your taxable capital gains by accounting for inflation.
Use the inflation-adjusted goal formula: Future Cost = Present Cost × (1 + Inflation Rate) ^ Years. For example, if an MBA costs ₹20 lakh today and education inflation is 10%, the cost in 10 years would be ₹20,00,000 × (1.10)^10 = approximately ₹51.87 lakh. You can then use a SIP calculator to determine the monthly investment needed to reach this target.
India’s current CPI uses 2012 as the base year, with the base index value set at 100. All subsequent CPI values are measured relative to this base. For example, a CPI of 200 means prices have doubled compared to the 2012 baseline. The base year is periodically revised by MOSPI to keep the index relevant to current consumption patterns.
Disclaimer: The formulas and examples on this page are for educational purposes only. CPI data is sourced from MOSPI and CII from the Income Tax Department. Tax rules are as per FY 2025-26 provisions. Consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor for personalized investment decisions.