United States

Headline CPI

Headline CPI tracks consumer price inflation across the full household basket. It is the public-facing inflation measure most sensitive to food, energy, and other volatile prices.

Frequencymonthly · +2Transformlevel · +1

Source: BLS · CUSR0000SA0

Stored official data

Headline CPI in United States was 332.4 on April 1, 2026, higher by 2.11 (+0.6%) from the prior observation. Charted from monthly observations in index 1982-84=100.

Latest332.41
MoM+0.64%
YoY+3.78%
10Y Avg277.82
Latest observationApril 1, 2026
Model surprise-1.23

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Headline CPI time series chart. Showing observations from January 2016 to April 2026. Latest value 332.4.

Min237.34
Mean276.84
Max332.41
Latest observationApril 1, 2026

Source evidence

Tier 1 - critical
Source
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Native key
CUSR0000SA0
Freshness
Stored · 2026-04-01
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

CategoryPrices & Inflation
FrequencyMonthly
UnitIndex 1982-84=100
Latest observationApril 1, 2026
Platform last fetchJune 19, 2026
Transformslevel, mom, yoy
About this series

Headline consumer price index for all urban consumers from the BLS CPI release.

The reading right now

As of April 2026, Headline CPI for United States stood at 332.4. That is up 2.11 from the prior month. Over the trailing five years, the series has averaged 304.2, ranging from a low of 266.6 in April 2021 to a high of 332.4 in April 2026. The current reading sits 54.6 above its trailing ten-year mean of 277.8.

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

About this indicator

About

The headline Consumer Price Index measures the average price American households pay for a basket of goods and services. The Bureau of Labor Statistics releases it once a month, usually on the second Tuesday, covering the prior month. The basket is built from about 80,000 price quotes a month, collected in 75 urban areas, weighted by what consumers actually spend money on according to the Consumer Expenditure Survey. Headline CPI includes food and energy, which makes it more volatile than core but closer to what families actually pay at the register.

Why it matters

Headline CPI anchors Social Security cost-of-living adjustments, military and federal civilian pensions, and the bracket boundaries of the federal income tax code. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) pay coupons that adjust to it. A 0.1 percentage-point surprise in either direction can move 2-year Treasury yields by 5-15 basis points within minutes of the release, and futures prices on the federal funds rate adjust in parallel.

How it's computed

BLS prices a fixed basket each month and chains the index forward using a modified Laspeyres formula, with a Tornqvist update every two years to handle substitution. The base period is 1982-84 = 100. Two main variants exist: CPI-U for all urban consumers (the headline) and CPI-W for urban wage earners (the COLA base). Owners' equivalent rent — the imputed cost of owning a home — is the largest single component at about 27% of the basket.

Pitfalls

Most people quote the year-over-year headline. The Fed reads the seasonally adjusted month-over-month change instead, because that's what shows up in policy timing. Quality adjustment (hedonic regression) and the OER methodology produce a recurring debate about whether CPI under- or over-states the inflation a real household feels. The Boskin Commission report from 1996 is still the canonical critique.