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Raise calculator

Salary inflation calculator

Compare a raise against inflation and see whether your pay is really moving forward after prices rise.

Example: A 4% raise when prices rose 3% is only about a 1% gain in what your pay can buy.

Real raise after inflation

A snapshot, not the year

Positive means the raise beat inflation; negative means buying power fell.

Get Goal Cue — keep this on pace

Use the result

A calculator gives the number. Goal Cue keeps it alive.

Put the inflation-adjusted salary target into Goal Cue and track whether the year is actually on pace.

Download Goal Cue

The real question

A 5% raise is not automatically progress. If prices rose faster than your pay, your real wage went down even though the paycheck number went up.

What the result means

The calculator compares the new salary after the raise with the salary required to preserve last year's buying power.

Why track it through the year

After you set the right annual number, the harder job is staying on pace. Goal Cue breaks that salary or income target into where you should be today.

Source note

BLS CPI-U (CUUR0000SA0) for May 2026: 4.2% year over year. Published June 10, 2026. Use this as a starting assumption for U.S. purchasing-power planning, then adjust it for your own decision.

BLS CPI-U (CUUR0000SA0)

Questions

What is a real raise?

A real raise is the part of a pay increase left after accounting for inflation. If pay rises 4% while prices rise 5%, the real raise is negative.

Can salaried workers use Goal Cue?

Yes. Goal Cue works for salaried professionals who want to compare annual pay, bonuses, commissions, or raise targets against inflation.