The Inflation Hangover: How the Post-Pandemic Price Surge Reshaped Affordability in America
Introduction
In the years since the COVID-19 pandemic, Americans have experienced one of the most abrupt economic swings in modern history. A record-breaking collapse in 2020 was followed by a rapid rebound as restrictions lifted, businesses reopened, and policymakers deployed extraordinary fiscal and monetary support. The recovery was swift, but so was the surge in prices. Between 2021 and 2023, inflation rose at the fastest pace in four decades as massive fiscal expansion and lingering supply constraints pushed demand beyond the economy’s capacity.
Although inflation has since slowed, that has not meant lower prices for U.S. consumers. The result is a higher cost-of-living baseline that continues to shape household budgets today. For many families, the rising costs of even the most basic necessities leaves them with little money left over for savings and other expenses.
This paper examines how the post-pandemic inflation shock reshaped affordability across the United States. By comparing household incomes to a standardized basket of essential expenses before the pandemic and today, we assess where purchasing power has eroded most, where it has proven more resilient, and which cost pressures now define the modern affordability crisis.
Key Findings
- Affordability varies dramatically by state. In 2025, households on average had $2,170 (24.7% of gross household income) left over every month after accounting for state and federal income taxes and paying for only the most necessary expenses, including shelter and utilities, groceries, health and car insurance, gas, and child care. Households in the least affordable state – Hawaii – retained just over $800/month after taxes and these core expenses.
- On average, household expenses for essential items increased drastically in recent years. For example, on average, grocery costs increased 25.1%, shelter and utilities costs increased 33.9%, and car insurance costs increased 41.2% between 2019 and 2025. CSI estimates that, on average, households spent $15,400 more for basic necessities in 2025 than they did in 2019.
- While 21 states saw modest improvements in affordability due to incomes rising faster than expenses, 30 states experienced declines. Of those states that saw declining affordability, households effectively lost an average of 3.2% of their income to rising prices. In Rhode Island where affordability deteriorated the most, households lost 8.4% of their income to higher prices.
- Shelter is the dominant driver of the affordability crisis, and the difference in affordability rankings between states. While these costs averaged $1,624/month, or 18.5% of a household’s monthly gross income, they ranged between 13.5% for the most affordable state to 28.8% for the least. On average, annual shelter and utilities costs increased $4,934 between 2019 and 2025.
Post-Pandemic Inflation and the Beginning of the Affordability Crisis
Affordability remains one of the top issues on Americans’ minds. According to survey data from Talker Research, nearly 90% of Americans believe the country is facing a “cost-of-living crisis,”[i] and polling from the Pew Research Center consistently shows that the rising cost of everyday goods and services – including food, housing, and healthcare – ranks as the public’s top economic concern.[ii]
To understand why affordability today is strained, however, we must return to 2020.
The arrival of COVID-19 triggered an abrupt and historic contraction in economic activity. Government-mandated shutdowns and widespread uncertainty brought large segments of the economy to a standstill. In April 2020 alone, total nonfarm employment fell more than 13% compared to the prior month – the largest monthly decline on record – while the unemployment rate surged to nearly 15%.[iii][iv] Real gross domestic product (GDP) contracted at an annualized rate approaching 30% in the second quarter of 2020, one of the sharpest collapses in modern economic history.
In response, the federal government enacted a series of extraordinary fiscal measures, beginning with the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act and culminating with the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. Combined, these measures injected trillions of dollars into the economy through direct payments, expanded unemployment benefits, business support programs, and aid to state and local governments. Federal debt increased by roughly $5.5 trillion over this period.[v]
At the same time, the Federal Reserve implemented unprecedented monetary accommodation. The Effective Federal Funds Rate was reduced to near zero, and the Fed expanded its balance sheet by roughly $3 trillion through large-scale asset purchases. A substantial share of new federal borrowing was effectively absorbed by the central bank, while liquidity flooded financial markets.
The scale and duration of this fiscal and monetary expansion extended well beyond the point of stabilization. The national economy returned to pre-pandemic real GDP levels within five quarters – roughly half the time required after the Great Recession – yet additional large-scale stimulus was enacted in 2021 even as economic activity was rebounding
Figure 1
This combination – a rapidly recovering economy, extraordinary fiscal transfers, near-zero interest rates, and lingering supply constraints – created the conditions for the fastest inflation in more than 40 years. Consumer prices peaked at nearly 9% year-over-year in mid-2022. Between 2021 and 2023, overall prices rose approximately 17 to 18% – roughly three times the pace that would have prevailed under normal inflation.
Housing costs surged in particular, rents climbed sharply, and everyday essentials such as groceries, vehicles, and energy experienced double-digit price increases. Supply chain disruptions and global energy shocks contributed to these pressures, but the breadth and persistence of inflation reflected the magnitude of demand stimulus layered onto an economy already in recovery.
Figure 2
Inflation Declined, but Affordability Issues Remain
By mid-2024, inflation had fallen below 3%, and as of January 2026 it stands near 2.4% — a sharp slowdown from the surge seen just a few years earlier. But unfortunately for U.S. households, slower inflation does not mean lower prices. It simply means prices are rising more slowly from their already historic highs. The rapid run-up between 2021 and 2023 permanently lifted the overall price level, resetting the cost of living at a higher baseline.
As a result, even with inflation largely back to normal, households are still contending with a materially more expensive economy than the one that existed prior to the inflationary shock.
While all states have been impacted by declining affordability, the impact of that surge has not been uniform. States entered the pandemic period with different cost structures, income levels, tax burdens, and housing markets. Some experienced rapid wage growth alongside rising prices. Others saw costs accelerate faster than incomes. In some states, housing became dramatically less attainable. In others, relative affordability was preserved.
How Do We Measure Affordability?
Understanding today’s affordability landscape therefore requires more than pointing to national inflation rates. It requires examining how incomes and essential costs have evolved in each state since before the inflationary shock to today.
To answer that question, CSI constructed a state-by-state affordability ranking comparing conditions in 2019 — prior to the inflationary surge — with those in 2025. The ranking measured changes in household income relative to a standardized basket of essential expenses, allowing us to assess where affordability has deteriorated most, where it has remained more resilient, and how purchasing power has shifted across states in the post-pandemic economy.
The affordability measure incorporated six core household necessities: shelter and utilities, groceries, health insurance, car insurance, gasoline, and child care. These costs were combined with estimated federal and state income tax liabilities faced by households in each state to form seven expense categories.
For each state, we constructed a standardized four-person household – referred to as the “modeled household”[1]– consisting of two adults, both working full-time at the state’s prevailing median hourly wage. Annual household income was calculated as median hourly earnings multiplied by 2,080/12 hours per worker to get monthly household income. We then compared this gross income to the total cost of the essential expense basket, including estimated income taxes.[2]
Affordability was measured as the residual or left-over income after paying for the necessities outlined above, and converted to a share of gross monthly income. States were ranked based on this residual income percentage, which reflects the degree of financial flexibility remaining to cover other essential and non-essential spending, savings, or unexpected costs.[3] For all rankings presented in this report, a number one ranking represents the “best,” or “most affordable” out of all states and Washington D.C.
CSI 2025 Affordability Rankings
Figure 3
As Figure 3 illustrates, affordability differed vastly across the country. The cost of living was most strained for households residing in western and north-eastern coastal states, along with other western states like Arizona and Colorado. Our modeled household in the least affordable state according to our 2025 ranking, Hawaii, retained an estimated 9.0% of its gross monthly income after accounting for expenses and income taxes. Meaning, the modeled household in Hawaii had only about $800 leftover each month to cover other necessities, including car payments, other personal utilities like internet and cell phone coverage, clothing, and any other costs typically borne by a household. This number paled in comparison to the affordability of Iowa, the most affordable state in 2025, in which our modeled household retained 34.7% (nearly $2,900) of their gross monthly income to cover other household expenses. On average across all states, our modeled households retained 24.7% of their gross income in 2025 after accounting for expenses and income taxes, or about $2,170/month.
Figure 4
Affordability is a Shelter Problem
Shelter is the largest household expense captured in this analysis and is the overwhelming driver of the affordability crisis according to our rankings, followed by child care and the overall income tax burden. Put another way, shelter costs have shaped the affordability landscape drastically over the last several years as the primary fiscal constraint facing U.S. households.
Figure 5
On average across all states in 2025, shelter and utilities costs consumed 18.5% of gross household income, for an average monthly cost of $1,624. However, costs varied greatly across the states. For the five most affordable states overall, shelter costs averaged just 15.9% of gross income, for an average monthly cost of $1,382. For the five least affordable states, shelter costs averaged 22.4% of gross income, or $2,178 per month.
Figure 6
Child Care and Taxes Constrain Household Budgets
After shelter and utilities, child care and income taxes were second and third largest expenses faced by our modeled households.
On average, monthly full-time child care costs for a preschooler and school-aged child combined for an average monthly cost of $1,487 – or about 16.9% of gross household income in 2025 across all states – more than the combined expenses for groceries and gas in our analysis ($1,394 per month), and well above the 7% of household income benchmark laid out by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.[vi]
For many families, these costs are prohibitive and can often force one parent to exit from the labor force all together.[vii] CSI estimates that, on average, one parent must earn at least $10.00/hour just to cover child care costs for the household. Put another way, it takes roughly 40% of the gross income generated by one parent working full time at the prevailing median hourly wage to cover child care costs for the household.
In the most affordable state for child care costs, Kansas, our modeled household would have to pay more than $915 a month for full-time child care, 11.1% of their gross household income. In New York, the least affordable state for child care, the modeled household would have to spend $2,446 a month on child care costs – nearly a quarter of the modeled household’s income and more than three times the 7% affordable benchmark discussed above.
The total federal and local income tax burden also plays a significant role in our affordability rankings, as the overall income tax burden faced by our modeled households averages $1,249 a month, or 14.2% of gross income. This amount also varies greatly across the states due to a combination of local income tax structure and the progressivity of federal marginal income tax rates. For example, our modeled household in Washington D.C. faced the largest income tax burden by far at $3,665 per month, or 23.8% of gross income. In contrast, the income tax burden for the modeled household in South Dakota is only 10.4% of gross income ($811 a month).
More interestingly, the total income tax burden faced by households appears to be a significant factor in affordability. For example, Washington D.C.’s affordability ranking in 2025 climbed to first after excluding the impact of income taxes. (Washington, D.C. combines high tax levies with some of the highest median incomes in the nation.) Texas and Tennessee on the other hand, which do not have state income taxes, generally fell in the rankings once excluding income taxes, while many others remained unchanged. Hawaii and California, 51st and 50th in our overall affordability rankings, remain unchanged even after excluding the total income tax burden, demonstrating the persistent lack of affordability for these areas.
Figure 7
What Did Affordability Look Like Prior to COVID?
Figure 8
Affordability in 2019 generally followed the same trends we see today. Coastal states like California, Oregon, and Florida were relatively unaffordable compared to the rest of the nation in 2019, while states like North and South Dakota, and Wyoming were comparatively affordable.
On average, modeled households across the country had $1,738 left over each month after covering the necessary expenses analyzed in this report, representing 25.9% of the average gross income. In 2019, 18.1% of gross household income was dedicated to shelter and utilities on average – slightly less than the 18.5% in 2025.
Reflecting the affordability crunch faced by U.S. households, all categories of expenses CSI analyzed in this report increased between 2019 and 2025.
In total, CSI estimates that households in 2025 needed to spend nearly $15,400 more per year ($1,280/month) just to cover the necessary expenses outlined in this report than they did in 2019. Although incomes did increase over this time, on average the increase was insufficient to keep up with the increase in costs. We estimate that our modeled households would have needed to earn $1,643/year more on average than they already did in 2025 just to maintain 2019 affordability. Our modeled household in Hawaii, which, again, was the least affordable state, needed to earn $5,728 more than they actually did in 2025 just to maintain 2019 affordability.
Figure 9
Households with children have been particularly hard hit by the affordability crunch. At an average annual increase of $5,000 per year, a 39.4% jump, child care costs represent the largest increase among all necessities captured in this report. Shelter and utilities costs were the second largest driver of the affordability decline. On average the annual shelter and utilities costs for our modeled households increased $4,934 between 2019 and 2025, a roughly 34% increase over that period. Interestingly, three of our categories – groceries, health insurance, and gas – saw slight improvements in average affordability between 2019 and 2025. However, we caution against conflating increases in affordability with overall price declines. For example, the average cost for groceries for our modeled households increased 25.1% between 2019 and 2025, but because income on average increased faster over the period, grocery costs as a share of that income fell 0.6 percentage points.
On average, our modeled households had to dedicate 1.2% more of their total monthly gross income to cover essentials in 2025 than they did in 2019, but this decline in affordability was not uniform. Twenty-one states in total saw affordability improve slightly, with Kansas experiencing the largest improvement (total costs as a share of gross income fell 5.1%). For the 30 states that experienced affordability declines, modeled households lost an average of 3.2% of their gross income in 2025 to higher prices. Rhode Island (8.4%), Massachusetts (8.1%), California (7.1%), New York (6.8%), and Washington D.C. (6.2%) experienced the largest declines in affordability as measured by the income lost to higher prices.
Figure 10
Figure 11
Figure 12
The Bottom Line
The post-pandemic inflation surge permanently reset the cost of living in America – and even though inflation has cooled, affordability has not recovered. Prices rose far faster than historic norms between 2021 and 2023, lifting the cost of necessities to levels that continue to strain household budgets today. While incomes grew, they did not keep pace uniformly across states leaving wide disparities in financial flexibility nationwide. Our analysis shows that affordability today is overwhelmingly a shelter problem, compounded by child care, and in many cases, state and local income taxes. These burdens vary dramatically by state, however. In short: the inflation spike of a few years ago may be over, but the affordability crisis it created is not – the inflation hangover is real, and families are still paying for it, especially in states where housing, child care, and income tax burdens are high.
[1] We use the term “modeled household” to avoid confusing this measure with median and average household statistics commonly used. Household composition differs between the states which makes comparisons of affordability using average or median households an apples to oranges comparison. To avoid this problem, we construct a fictional household for each state comprised of four members whose income were derived from the median hourly earnings data for each state. This construction holds constant demographic factors which may sway inter-state comparisons.
[2] See the Appendix A for more detailed methodology including data sources and calculations.
[i] Lombardi, Joe, “Survey reveals percentage of Americans who think there’s a cost-of-living crisis,” MSN, March 1, 2026.
[ii] Picchi, Aimee, “These 3 charts highlight the affordability issues Americans worry about most,” CBS News, February 24, 2026.
[iii] U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Current Employment Statistics (CES) National Estimates – Total Nonfarm Employment, Seasonally Adjusted,” U.S. Department of Labor, accessed March 1, 2026.
[iv] U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Current Population Survey (CPS) National Estimates – Unemployment Rate, Seasonally Adjusted,” U.S. Department of Labor, accessed March 1, 2026
[v]“The Nation’s Fiscal Health: Federal Action Critical to Pivot Toward Fiscal Sustainability,”U.S. Government Accountability Office, May 2022.
[vi]“Improving Child Care Access, Affordability, and Stability in the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF),”U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, March 1, 2024.
[vii] See CSI’s research on child care costs across the country.