What was £750 worth in 2000?
United Kingdom Inflation & Purchasing Power Calculator
In 2000, £750 represented approximately 1.7 weeks of average wages — a reasonable sum.
Housing Bubble, Debt Explosion, and the Great Recession
The 2000s began with the dot-com bust and ended with the worst financial crisis since 1929. In between, easy credit and a housing bubble created an illusion of widespread prosperity. Consumer purchasing power was artificially inflated by debt rather than real wage growth. When the 2008 financial crisis hit, the true fragility was exposed — home equity evaporated overnight and unemployment surged to 10%. The Federal Reserve responded by cutting rates to near zero and beginning quantitative easing, setting the stage for a decade of ultra-low inflation but also asset price inflation that benefited the wealthy disproportionately.
US household debt rose from 65% of GDP in 2000 to 98% of GDP in 2007 — meaning that for every dollar Americans earned, they owed nearly a dollar in debt.
£750 as a small fortune
£750 in 2000 was a small fortune by contemporary standards. Outside the owning classes, few people handled sums this large in a single transaction. This is the scale of a modest inheritance, a house deposit, or several years of working-class savings. Merchants and middle-class professionals thought in these numbers; labourers rarely saw them.
What was happening in 2000
2000 was the peak of the dot-com bubble. The Nasdaq hit 5,048 in March, then collapsed over the next two years. Y2K came and went without incident. Inflation that year was a mild 3.4%. The idea that the business cycle had been defeated turned out to be temporary.
What £750 could buy in 2000 vs today
Life in United Kingdom in 2000
The average annual wage in United Kingdom in 2000 was approximately £22,356. This means £750 represented roughly 1.7 weeks of average earnings — a reasonable sum. A loaf of bread cost approximately £0.49 and monthly rent averaged around £720.
How £750 Lost Its Value Over Time
Frequently Asked Questions
What is £750 from 2000 worth in 2026?+
£750 in 2000 is equivalent to approximately £1,676 in 2026. This represents a 123% increase due to cumulative inflation in United Kingdom between 2000 and 2026.
How much has the £ lost in value since 2000?+
Since 2000, the United Kingdom currency has lost approximately 55% of its purchasing power. In other words, what cost £750 in 2000 would cost £1,676 today — you need 2.2× more money to buy the same goods.
What was the average salary in United Kingdom in 2000?+
Based on historical wage data, £750 in 2000 represented approximately 1.7 weeks of average wages in United Kingdom. This helps illustrate not just the nominal price change, but what money actually meant in human terms — how long people had to work to earn it.
How accurate is this inflation calculation for 2000?+
This calculation uses official Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for United Kingdom. For years before 1913 (USA) or equivalent periods for other countries, the calculation uses reconstructed price indices from academic sources including MeasuringWorth.com and the Bank of England's Millennium Dataset. Pre-industrial calculations carry a wider margin of uncertainty.
Why does purchasing power matter more than just inflation percentage?+
A simple inflation percentage tells you how prices changed, but purchasing power shows you what money could actually buy in human terms. £750 in 2000 bought a specific number of loaves of bread, weeks of rent, or months of wages — context that makes the number real and tangible, not just an abstract percentage.
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Flip the question
If £750 in 2000 sounds like a lot or a little, that's partly a question of who earned it. The Rich-O-Meter lets you plug in any salary and see where it would have placed you in 2000's income distribution — the same money felt very different depending on whether you were a labourer or a professional.
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Beyond history, there's geography. Our WealthMap compares your current salary to median income in around 90 countries today. A middle-class income in one country is wealthy-elite in another — and the gap between these places is often wider than the gap between eras.
Open the WealthMapThese calculations are estimates based on United Kingdom's CPI data from Bank of England Millennium Dataset; ONS CPI/RPI series; Clark (2005) cost-of-living index. Pre-1914 uses Bank of England 'A Millennium of Macroeconomic Data' (Broadberry et al.). Napoleonic inflation 1800–1815 and Victorian deflation 1815–1896 reflected. See our Methodology and Data Sources for full details. Not financial advice.