Calculate how your savings and investments grow with compound interest. See future value, total contributions, interest earned, and a year-by-year growth breakdown.
Compound interest is the single most powerful force in wealth building. Unlike simple interest, which is calculated only on the original principal, compound interest earns interest on previously accumulated interest — creating a snowball effect that accelerates over time. Albert Einstein reportedly called it "the eighth wonder of the world."
This calculator shows you exactly how your money grows over time with regular contributions and compounding. Enter your initial deposit, monthly contribution, expected annual return, and investment timeline to see the future value of your savings, total amount contributed, and how much of your wealth comes from interest alone.
The results are often eye-opening. A 25-year-old who invests $300/month at 8% average return will have over $1 million by age 65. Starting just 10 years later requires nearly $700/month to reach the same goal. This is why financial advisors emphasize starting early — time is the most powerful ingredient in compound growth.
Seeing the numbers makes compound interest real. Most people intuitively understand that saving is important, but they underestimate how dramatically time and consistency multiply their money. This calculator transforms abstract concepts into concrete dollar amounts.
Use it to set retirement savings targets, evaluate whether your current savings rate is on track, compare different investment strategies, or motivate yourself by seeing how small monthly increases in contributions lead to massive differences over 20-30 years.
FV = P(1 + r/n)^(nt) + PMT × [((1 + r/n)^(nt) − 1) / (r/n)] Where: FV = future value P = initial principal (starting balance) PMT = periodic contribution r = annual interest rate (decimal) n = compounds per year (12 for monthly) t = number of years
Result: $458,197
Starting with $5,000 and contributing $300/month at 8% compounded monthly for 30 years grows to $458,197. Total contributed: $113,000. Interest earned: $345,197 — more than 3× what you put in. This demonstrates the extraordinary power of compound interest over long time horizons.
Consider two investors. Investor A starts at 25, contributes $300/month for 10 years, then stops contributing but leaves the money invested at 8% until age 65. Investor B waits until 35 and contributes $300/month continuously until 65. Investor A contributes only $36,000 total; Investor B contributes $108,000. Yet Investor A ends up with more money because those early contributions had more time to compound. This counterintuitive result is the essence of compound interest.
With simple interest, you earn a fixed dollar amount each year based on the original principal. $10,000 at 8% simple interest earns $800/year — forever. After 30 years: $34,000. With compound interest, the same $10,000 at 8% grows to $100,627 after 30 years — nearly 3× more. The gap widens dramatically over longer periods.
While your investments may grow at 8% nominally, inflation (historically about 3% in the U.S.) reduces your purchasing power. The "real" return is approximately 5%. When planning for goals 20+ years away, consider whether your target amount is in today's dollars or future dollars, and adjust accordingly.
Compound interest is interest calculated on both the initial principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. If you earn 8% on $1,000, after one year you have $1,080. The next year, you earn 8% on $1,080 (not just $1,000), giving you $1,166.40. This "interest on interest" accelerates growth over time.
More frequent compounding produces slightly higher returns. An 8% rate compounded monthly yields 8.30% effective annual return, vs. 8.16% compounded quarterly. The difference is modest for typical savings but becomes meaningful on large balances over long periods.
For a diversified stock portfolio, 7-10% annual nominal return is a common long-term assumption. After inflation, expect 4-7%. Bonds return 3-5%. Savings accounts currently offer 4-5%. Be conservative in your estimates to avoid shortfalls.
Time is the most powerful variable in compound growth. Investing $300/month starting at age 25 at 8% yields about $1.05 million by age 65. Starting at 35 yields only $447,000. The 10-year head start more than doubles the result — those early contributions had 40 years to compound.
No, this shows pre-tax growth. In a tax-advantaged account (401k, Roth IRA), you may grow tax-deferred or tax-free. In a taxable account, annual taxes on dividends and capital gains reduce effective returns by 1-2% depending on your bracket.
Divide 72 by your annual return rate to estimate how many years it takes to double your money. At 8%, money doubles roughly every 9 years. At 10%, every 7.2 years. It is a powerful mental shortcut for understanding compound growth.
Financial advisors commonly recommend saving 15-20% of gross income for retirement. Use this calculator to reverse-engineer: enter your goal amount, expected return, and timeline to see what monthly contribution gets you there.