£10,000 in 2000 equals £21,358 today

Adjusted from 2000 to 2024 using ONS CPI (series D7BT): 113.6% cumulative inflation, roughly 3.21% per year over 24 years.

£

CPI-adjusted value

£21,358

£10,000 in 20002024

Delta
+£11,358
Cumulative
113.6%
Annualised
3.21%
Direction
forward, 24 years

How this is calculated

We apply the ratio of the ONS Consumer Prices Index (CPI, series D7BT) between the two years — the same method used by the Bank of England's public inflation calculator. For example £100 in 2015 scales by 138.4 / 100.0 = 1.384 to give £138.40 in 2024.

The annualised rate is the compound inflation per year required to turn the start value into the end value over the period. The cumulative figure is the total change over the whole span.

Source: ONS D7BT timeseries. Dataset uses ONS annual averages — for sub-year granularity consult the ONS website directly.

A quick look at 2000

In 2000 a loaf of bread was about 52p, a litre of petrol ~81p, the median UK full-time salary ~£18,800 and an average UK house cost £81,600 (Nationwide).

What this means

If you earned, spent or received £10,000 in 2000, its purchasing power in today's money is about £21,358. In other words, to buy the same basket of goods and services in 2024 you'd need roughly £21,358 — a difference of £11,358 over 24 years.

The annualised inflation rate between 2000 and 2024 worked out at about 3.21% per year — compounded over that period that stacks up to the cumulative 113.6% change.

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