United States

Real GDP

Real GDP measures inflation-adjusted output. It is the cleaner read on how much an economy is actually producing through time because price changes are stripped out.

Frequencyquarterly · +1Transformlevel

Source: BEA · NIPA:T10106:1

Stored official data

Real GDP in United States was $24152.7T on January 1, 2026, higher by $96.9T (+0.4%) from the prior observation. Charted from quarterly observations in billions of chained 2017 dollars.

Latest$24.2T
QoQ+0.40%
YoY+2.57%
10Y Avg$21.4T
Latest observationJanuary 1, 2026
Model surprise-$145B

Timeframe

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Chart appearance

Overlays & outputNBER bandsAuto Y
Axis & export

Real GDP time series chart. Showing observations from 1947 01-01 to 2026 01-01. Latest value $24152.7T.

Min$2.17T
Mean$10.4T
Max$24.2T
Latest observationJanuary 1, 2026

Source evidence

Tier 1 - critical
Source
Bureau of Economic Analysis
Native key
NIPA:T10106:1
Freshness
Stored · 2026-01-01
History
Provider revision tag
Reuse
Public domain

Research notes

90 · Strong
Comparability
3 notes
Quality
4/6 strong
Citation
Retrieved Jun 19, 2026

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Series details, provenance, and revision toolsMetadata, release notes, revision history, and related series.

Series details

CategoryBEA NIPA
FrequencyQuarterly
UnitBillions of chained 2017 dollars
Latest observationJanuary 1, 2026
Platform last fetchJune 19, 2026
Transformslevel, yoy, annualized
About this series

Inflation-adjusted output across the U.S. economy from the BEA NIPA tables.

The reading right now

As of January 2026, Real GDP for United States stood at $24152.7T. That is up $96.9T from the prior quarter. Over the trailing five years, the series has averaged $22777T, ranging from a low of $21082.1T in January 2021 to a high of $24152.7T in January 2026. The current reading sits $2675T above its trailing ten-year mean of $21477.7T.

Computed from the observation series on this page. Numbers update when the underlying provider revises the data.

About this indicator

About

Real gross domestic product is the inflation-adjusted dollar value of all final goods and services produced in the United States. The Bureau of Economic Analysis publishes three estimates of each quarter: an advance release about one month after the quarter ends, a second estimate one month later, and a third estimate one month after that. Annual revisions in July rewrite the prior five years against more complete source data.

Why it matters

Real GDP is the headline measure of how the economy is performing. The National Bureau of Economic Research Business Cycle Dating Committee uses it (alongside other measures) to date recessions. The Federal Reserve's reaction function reads it through the output gap, the difference between actual real GDP and the Congressional Budget Office's potential GDP estimate. A surprise in either direction reprices the path of rates and the equity risk premium.

How it's computed

BEA computes real GDP from the expenditure side: consumer spending, gross private investment, government consumption and investment, and net exports. Each component is deflated by its own price index using a chain-weighted Fisher index, base year currently 2017. Quarterly figures are reported at seasonally adjusted annual rates (SAAR), meaning a 2% quarterly print is what would happen annualized, not the actual quarter-over-quarter change.

Pitfalls

The advance estimate is built on partial data — international trade and inventories aren't fully known yet. Revisions between the advance and third estimates typically run 0.5 to 1.0 percentage points. The annualization convention is also a frequent source of confusion: a 'real GDP growth of 2.5%' headline means an annualized rate, not what the economy actually grew in three months.