How to Use the Salary Raise Calculator
- Enter your current salary — the base salary you earn before the raise takes effect.
- Enter your raise percentage — the percentage increase your employer has offered or that you are estimating. Even small differences here compound dramatically over time.
- Set the inflation rate (CPI) — the Consumer Price Index for your country. In the US, the long-run average is about 3%, but recent years have seen 4–8%. Use your best estimate for the coming year.
- Set your projection horizon in years — how many years you want to see the compounding projection for. 10 years is the default; you can set up to 40 years for a full career view.
- Enter your marginal tax rate to get a take-home estimate. The US federal brackets for 2026 put most middle-income earners in the 22% bracket; add state tax if needed.
- Review the Real Raise headline — this is the single most important number. If it is close to zero or negative, your raise is not actually increasing your purchasing power.
- Check the To Beat Inflation banner — it shows the exact raise percentage you would need to beat inflation plus 2% real growth. Compare it to what you received and use it in your next performance review.
Nominal vs Real Raise: The Most Important Distinction in Compensation
When your employer announces a 4% raise, almost everyone feels good about it. But what most people miss is that this 4% is a nominal raise — it is denominated in dollars that will be worth less next year than they are worth today. The real raise is what is left over after inflation eats its share.
The formula is simple: Real Raise % = ((1 + Nominal Raise) / (1 + Inflation) − 1) × 100. At 4% nominal and 3.5% CPI, your real raise is only 0.48%. At 4% nominal and 4% CPI, your real raise is exactly 0% — you are running in place. If inflation runs at 4.5%, you are actually taking a pay cut in real terms even though your nominal salary went up.
This is the illusion that catches most workers off guard. Companies know that a 4% raise sounds substantial. Psychologically, more dollars feel like more money. But if the price of groceries, rent, gas, insurance, and childcare has risen 4–5% over the same period, your ability to buy things has not improved — and may have declined.
The purchasing-power framing makes this concrete. If you earn $100,000 and receive a 4% raise to $104,000, but inflation runs at 3.5%, your new salary in today's dollars is $100,483 — a real gain of just $483 per year. That is the accurate picture of how your life improved. The extra $3,517 in your paycheck is not buying anything new — it is compensating for higher prices on things you already buy.
What raise do you need to actually beat inflation? The calculator shows you the minimum raise percentage needed to beat inflation by 2% in real terms. At 3.5% CPI, you need a 5.57% raise to earn a true 2% real increase. This is the figure you should bring into your next performance review — not just "I'd like more than 4%," but "given CPI at 3.5%, a 5.5% raise would represent a real increase of about 2%, which I believe reflects my contribution."
Compounding makes the gap enormous over time. Consider two employees who both start at $100,000. Employee A gets 4% annually for 10 years with 3.5% CPI. Employee B negotiates 5.5% annually. After 10 years, Employee A has a nominal salary of $148,024 but a real salary in today's dollars of $103,756. Employee B has a nominal salary of $170,814 and a real salary of $119,713. The compounding gap over a career is not thousands of dollars — it is hundreds of thousands.
How to use this data in a raise negotiation: Bring specific numbers. "Given that CPI was X% last year and is forecast at Y% this year, a Z% raise is needed just to maintain my purchasing power. My performance review shows [specific accomplishments]. I'm requesting a W% raise to reflect both cost-of-living reality and my contribution to [metric]." Managers respond to data. Framing your ask around real purchasing power rather than a nominal number signals financial sophistication and seriousness.
Frequently Asked Questions
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My raise is less than inflation. What does that actually mean for me?
It means your salary increased in dollar terms, but your ability to purchase goods and services declined. You can afford slightly less with your new salary than you could with your old salary a year ago, because prices rose faster than your pay. This is effectively a real pay cut, even though no one used those words. Over several years, this compounds into a meaningful reduction in your standard of living relative to where you started.
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Which CPI number should I use?
The most common choice is the Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI-U (all urban consumers), which covers the basket of goods most US workers consume. For the most recent 12-month figure, check bls.gov. For future projections, the Federal Reserve's long-run inflation target of 2% is the baseline, though actual CPI has averaged closer to 3% over multi-decade periods. You can also use regional CPI if your local cost of living differs significantly from the national average.
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Should I negotiate based on CPI or on market salary data?
Both, ideally. CPI tells you whether you are keeping up with purchasing power; market salary data (Glassdoor, LinkedIn Salary, Levels.fyi, BLS Occupational Employment Stats) tells you whether your salary is competitive for your role, experience level, and location. The strongest negotiating position combines both: "My salary has not kept up with CPI,
and I am 10% below market for my role." Use this calculator to frame the CPI argument, and research Glassdoor or LinkedIn Salary for the market-rate argument. Then if you're considering a full job change, the
Job Offer Total Compensation Calculator can help you evaluate competing offers.
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What if my company says raises are fixed at 3% company-wide?
Company-wide raise pools are real constraints but not absolute ones. High performers routinely receive above-pool adjustments — this is why performance reviews exist. If your company genuinely will not deviate from the pool, shift the conversation to non-salary compensation: a signing/retention bonus, an accelerated promotion timeline, equity grants, additional PTO, or a professional development budget. If none of those are available either and your real raise is negative, the best action is often to benchmark externally and consider your options. You can use the
Counteroffer Calculator to see what pushing back on a new offer could be worth over your career.
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How does the take-home estimate work?
The calculator multiplies your new gross salary by (1 − marginal tax rate) to give a rough take-home estimate. This is a simplified approximation — it does not account for the fact that only the marginal dollars are taxed at your top rate, and it ignores pre-tax deductions (401k, HSA, health insurance) that reduce your taxable income. For a precise take-home, use a full paycheck calculator. But as a directional estimate of how much of your raise actually hits your bank account, this number is useful for planning purposes.
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How do I compare this raise against a new job offer?
If your current raise leaves your real purchasing power flat or negative, it may be worth exploring the market. Use the
Job Offer Total Compensation Calculator to evaluate any external offer on a full total-comp basis — base salary, bonus, RSU vesting, 401k match, health insurance, and cost-of-living adjustments. And once you have an offer, use the
Counteroffer Calculator to see the lifetime value of negotiating the base salary higher before you accept.