2000 – 2008
Stable & Strong
The rupee holds a ₹44–48 band and even strengthens to ~₹40 in 2007 on the IT and capital-inflow boom.
USD / INR · 2000 – 2026
From about ₹45 a dollar in 2000 to roughly ₹96 in 2026, the rupee has lost about half its value. Here's the year-by-year slide, why it happens, and how it hits industries, growth and your wallet.
Rate, causes & impact · 2000 → 2026
The Big Picture
The rupee's journey against the dollar moved from a stable band, through crisis-driven shocks, to a long steady slide.
2000 – 2008
The rupee holds a ₹44–48 band and even strengthens to ~₹40 in 2007 on the IT and capital-inflow boom.
2008 – 2014
The global crisis (2008) and the 2013 taper tantrum (record ₹68.8) expose a wide current-account deficit.
2014 – 2026
A managed but persistent depreciation from ₹61 to ~₹96, driven by oil, the Fed and a strong dollar.
Year by Year
The turning points in the rupee's slide, tagged by category and the government of the day. The line fills as you scroll.
The Rate
The dollar's value in rupees, year by year (calendar-year average), with the annual change. A rising number means a weaker rupee.
| Year | ₹ per US$ | Change | Why |
|---|
Calendar-year average, approximate (the rate moves every day). 2026 is the latest level (June), not a full-year average. A red ▲ = the rupee weakened that year; green ▼ = it strengthened. Source: RBI / FRED.
Why It Falls
A currency's value is set by the demand for dollars versus rupees. Several forces keep pulling that balance against the rupee.
Winners & Losers
A weaker rupee is not bad for everyone — it helps those who earn dollars and hurts those who spend them.
You & the Economy
The exchange rate feels abstract, but it quietly shapes inflation, the budget and everyday prices.
This page is compiled from RBI, FRED and news sources and updated periodically. The exchange rate moves every day — tell us if something's out of date.