Cost in hours
All items CPI in Hours Worked
All items CPI required 10.8% less work time in April 2026 than in March 2006, at these assumptions. The comparison divides the category CPI movement by the BLS average-hourly-earnings movement, so the figure is a wage-denominated affordability lens rather than a forecast.
Direct answer
What changed?
The all-items CPI basket required 10.8% less average private-sector work time than it did in March 2006 after dividing CPI movement by the BLS hourly-wage denominator. The result is 0.892x as much average work time, at these assumptions.
At these assumptions: national BLS category index CPIAUCSL, national BLS private hourly earnings CES0500000003, March 2006 to April 2026. Aspire is an educational planning tool, not investment, tax, legal, insurance, or financial advice.
Headline figure
10.8% less work time
That means this category took 10.8% less average private-sector work time than it did at the base month. In dollar-index terms, All items CPI moved 1.665x while the wage denominator moved 1.867x.
- Base index
- 199.7
- Latest index
- 332.407
- Price multiple
- 1.665x
- Hours multiple
- 0.892x
How to read this
Dollars answer one question: what happened to the index level? Hours answer a different one: how much work time would the same national category take if the wage denominator moved with average private hourly earnings? Neither number is your household. Both make the assumptions visible.
The useful part is the comparison. All items CPI sits inside a broader life basket, but it does not move like every other category. A household dominated by headline CPI basket can feel a different inflation rate than the all-items number, especially when geography, benefits, debt costs, and family structure differ from the national benchmark.
Use this page as a source-backed starting point, then price your own future in the Calculator. Aspire compares the cost growth of the life you want with the growth assumptions for your resources, at these assumptions, without recommending any security or financial product.
Sources
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI and Current Employment Statistics via FRED. Category series CPIAUCSL and wage series CES0500000003. Retrieved May 29, 2026 from FRED.
- Base month: March 2006. Latest month in this dataset: April 2026. Geographic scope: United States.
- Method: hours_multiple = (latest CPI index / base CPI index) / (latest hourly wage / base hourly wage). Values are national category-index comparisons, not household-specific estimates.