skip to content

Money

&

Prices

Salary Analysis

Is $100,000 a Good Salary in 2026?

With national inflation running at 2.6% in 2025, a $100,000 salary needs to reach $102,600 just to maintain the same purchasing power it had a year ago. That's $2,600 more just to break even with rising prices.

Data: BLS CPI-U 2025 annual (M13) | Updated each January

Your Salary

$100,000

Needed to Break Even

$102,600

after 2.6% inflation

Purchasing Power Lost

$2,600

in real terms

What This Means

If you earned $100,000 last year and received a raise of exactly 2.6% — bringing you to $102,600 — your real purchasing power would be unchanged. Any raise below that means you are effectively earning less in real terms, even if your paycheck is nominally larger.

For example, a 3% raise on $100,000 brings your salary to $103,000. With 2.6% inflation, your real raise would be 0.4% — a genuine gain in purchasing power.

By Metro Area

Inflation varies by city. Here is how much $100,000 needs to grow in each major metro just to maintain purchasing power, based on 2025 annual CPI data.

Metro Area Local Inflation (2025) Salary Needed to Break Even Gap
San Diego-Carlsbad +3.8% $103,800 +$3,800
New York-Newark-Jersey City +3.4% $103,400 +$3,400
Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington +3.2% $103,200 +$3,200
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim +3.2% $103,200 +$3,200
Boston-Cambridge-Newton +3.1% $103,100 +$3,100
Chicago-Naperville-Elgin +3.1% $103,100 +$3,100
Baltimore-Columbia-Towson +3.1% $103,100 +$3,100
Tampa-St Petersburg-Clearwater +2.7% $102,700 +$2,700
Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach +2.6% $102,600 +$2,600
St. Louis +2.4% $102,400 +$2,400
Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue +2.4% $102,400 +$2,400
Minneapolis-St Paul-Bloomington +2.3% $102,300 +$2,300
Denver-Aurora-Lakewood +2.3% $102,300 +$2,300
Washington-Arlington-Alexandria +2.2% $102,200 +$2,200
San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward +2.2% $102,200 +$2,200
Detroit-Warren-Dearborn +1.7% $101,700 +$1,700
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell +1.7% $101,700 +$1,700
Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington +1.3% $101,300 +$1,300
Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land +1.3% $101,300 +$1,300
Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale +1.2% $101,200 +$1,200

City-Specific Salary Guides

See how $100,000 compares in specific cities, including local rent burden and affordability.

Calculate Your Real Raise

Enter your actual salary and your metro area to see exactly whether your raise kept up with local inflation — or whether you took a real pay cut.

Open Full Calculator →

Related Salary Levels

Data Source

Salary inflation calculations use the BLS CPI-U All Items 2025 annual (M13). Metro inflation figures reflect the 2025 annual rate for each metropolitan area published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The national inflation figure uses the 2025 annual rate. Annual inflation data is updated each January. bls.gov | Money & Prices