Germany
Inflation in Germany for 10 years: 2016 – 2026

Start
End
Data source:HICP Eurostat
Latest month of data:April 2026
Cumulative Inflation for 10 Years
+35.6%
Average Inflation Rate
3.1%
Price Multiplier
1.36x
Loss of Buying Power
-26.2%

Report for: May 2016April 2026

Moderate (creeping) inflation was recorded with an average annual rate of 3.1%. This is the standard operating mode for most economies, stimulating consumption. However, over time, this rate leads to a logical erosion of capital: the total cost of living increased by 1.36 times, reducing the real value of EUR to 74%.

Inflation Rate by Year

Inflation Adjusted Prices

Equivalent Value
What cost 100 EUR in 2016, would cost 136 EUR today. To maintain the same standard of living, income over 10 years should have grown by 1.36 times.
2016100 EUR
+35.6%
2026136 EUR

Value Adjusted for Inflation

Loss of Buying Power

Real Value
Since 2016, the purchasing power of 100 EUR has decreased to 74 EUR. The chart shows how EUR lost a total of 26.2% of its value over 10 years.
2016100 EUR
-26.2%
202674 EUR
-26%
Total Loss

Purchasing Power Over Time

Cumulative Inflation (%)

Historical Inflation Table

YearInflation (%)
20261.99%
20252.04%
20242.84%
20233.74%
20229.60%
20215.67%
2020-0.65%
20191.59%
20181.62%
20171.50%
20161.56%

Calculation Methodology

Calculations are based on HICP Eurostat. It is a consumer price index that measures the average change in prices for goods and services purchased by the population.

Price Multiplier

Price Multiplier shows how many times prices have increased. In macroeconomics, this baseline metric is known as the Price Index Ratio. It is derived directly from official CPI data and serves as the mathematical foundation for all other calculations on this page.

Formula:
Price Multiplier(K)=CPI2026CPI2016\text{Price Multiplier} (K) = \frac{\text{CPI}_{2026}}{\text{CPI}_{2016}}
Calculation:
102.67075.730=1.3557\frac{102.670}{75.730} = 1.3557
Cumulative Inflation

To calculate the cumulative inflation since 2016, we use the following formula:

Formula:
(K1)×100=Cumulative(%)(K - 1) \times 100 = \text{Cumulative} (\%)
Calculation:
(1.35571)×100=35.6%(1.3557 - 1) \times 100 = 35.6\%
Average Inflation Rate

Shows the average annual price growth rate including compound interest (where each year's inflation is added to already increased prices). To calculate the average annual inflation for 10 years since 2016, we use the following formula:

Formula:
K1n1=Average Inflation RateK^{\frac{1}{n}} - 1 = \text{Average Inflation Rate}
n — number of years (10)
Calculation:
(1.35571/101)×100=3.1%(1.3557^{1/10} - 1) \times 100 = 3.1\%
Loss of Buying Power

To find out what share of its real value savings in EUR have lost since 2016, we calculate the percentage drop in purchasing power. Loss of buying power is calculated as an inverse proportion to price growth:

Formula:
(11K)×100=Loss of Buying Power(%)\left( 1 - \frac{1}{K} \right) \times 100 = \text{Loss of Buying Power} (\%)
Calculation:
(111.3557)×100=26.2%\left( 1 - \frac{1}{1.3557} \right) \times 100 = 26.2\%
Equivalent Value

To calculate the equivalent value in terms of purchasing power in 2026, we multiply the initial value from 2016 by the price growth factor:

Formula:
Original Amount×K=Equivalent\text{Original Amount} \times K = \text{Equivalent}
Calculation:
100×1.3557=136 EUR100 \times 1.3557 = 136 \text{ EUR}

Citation & Data Usage

You can use the data in your articles. Link to the source:

"Inflation in Germany (2016–2026)", InflationCompare, . Accessed 26 May 2026. Data source: HICP Eurostat.