Free Investing calculator

Compound Interest Calculator

A compound interest calculator shows how money can grow when earnings are added to the balance and begin earning returns too. Use it to model savings, investments, and long-term financial goals.

Quick answer

Compound growth accelerates when returns stay invested. Time, contribution size, return rate, and compounding frequency all affect the ending balance.

Calculator

Enter your numbers

Amount invested today.
Amount added each month.
Assumed annual growth rate.
Number of years money remains invested.
How often the starting balance compounds each year.

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter the amount you have today.
  2. Add the amount you plan to contribute each month.
  3. Choose an expected annual return and time horizon.
  4. Review projected contributions, growth, and ending balance.

Explanation

What it is

A compound interest calculator shows how money can grow when earnings are added to the balance and begin earning returns too. Use it to model savings, investments, and long-term financial goals.

How it works

The calculator grows the starting balance using A = P(1 + r/m)^(mt) and adds the future value of recurring monthly contributions. It assumes a steady rate and contributions made at the end of each month.

When to use it

Use this calculator to compare realistic scenarios before making a financial decision, and update the inputs when rates, costs, income, or goals change.

Limitations

  • The result is an estimate based only on the inputs and assumptions shown.
  • It does not evaluate eligibility, product terms, market conditions, or personal legal and tax circumstances.
  • Actual outcomes can differ because of fees, timing, rounding, taxes, and provider-specific methods.

Key terms

Compound interest
Growth earned on both the original principal and prior earnings.
Principal
The starting amount invested or saved.
Contribution
Money added regularly to the account.
Rate of return
The assumed percentage gain or loss over a year.
Time horizon
The length of time the money remains invested.

Formula

The calculator grows the starting balance using A = P(1 + r/m)^(mt) and adds the future value of recurring monthly contributions. It assumes a steady rate and contributions made at the end of each month.

A = P(1 + r/m)ᵐᵗ + PMT × [((1 + r/12)¹²ᵗ − 1) ÷ (r/12)]

Worked example

Starting with $10,000, adding $500 each month, and assuming a 7% annual return for 20 years demonstrates how contributions and reinvested growth can combine into the ending balance.

FAQ

How much will $10,000 grow to in 20 years?

At a hypothetical 7% annual return with no additional contributions, $10,000 would grow to roughly $38,700 after 20 years. Actual investment returns vary and may be negative in some periods.

What is a realistic annual return to use?

There is no guaranteed rate. A planning assumption should reflect the investment mix, fees, taxes, inflation, and your risk tolerance. Testing several rates is more useful than relying on one optimistic estimate.

How often should interest compound?

Savings accounts may compound daily or monthly, while investment returns do not arrive at a fixed rate. More frequent compounding creates a small advantage when the stated rate is the same.

Does this calculator account for inflation?

No. Results are shown in future dollars. To estimate purchasing power, use a lower real return or compare the result with an assumed inflation rate.

Are taxes and investment fees included?

No. Taxes, fund expenses, advisory fees, and trading costs can reduce actual returns.

Why do early contributions matter so much?

Money contributed earlier has more time to earn returns and for those returns to compound. Starting sooner can reduce the amount needed later.

Common mistakes

  • Treating a steady return as guaranteed.
  • Ignoring fees, taxes, and inflation.
  • Using an unrealistically high return.
  • Forgetting that contribution timing changes results.

Tips

  • Run conservative, base, and optimistic scenarios.
  • Increase contributions before increasing the assumed return.
  • Compare future dollars with inflation-adjusted purchasing power.
  • Review actual fees.

Sources and editorial review

Educational estimates only; not personalized financial, tax, legal, lending, investment, or insurance advice.