Savings Goal Calculator
A savings goal calculator estimates the monthly contribution required to reach a target balance. Use it for a down payment, vacation, education cost, major purchase, or any planned expense.
Quick answer
The amount you need to save each month depends on the target, current balance, time available, and expected interest. A longer timeline usually lowers the monthly requirement.
Calculator
How to use this calculator
- Enter your target savings amount.
- Add the amount already saved.
- Choose an expected annual yield and timeline.
- Review the required monthly contribution and test alternative dates.
Explanation
What it is
A savings goal calculator estimates the monthly contribution required to reach a target balance. Use it for a down payment, vacation, education cost, major purchase, or any planned expense.
How it works
The calculator first grows the current balance, then solves the future value of a monthly annuity for the contribution required to close the remaining gap.
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
- Savings goal
- The target amount you want by a future date.
- Current balance
- The amount already set aside.
- Annual percentage yield
- A yearly measure of interest including compounding.
- Monthly contribution
- The amount added each month.
- Time horizon
- The period available to reach the goal.
Formula
The calculator first grows the current balance, then solves the future value of a monthly annuity for the contribution required to close the remaining gap.
Worked example
A $50,000 goal, $5,000 already saved, a five-year timeline, and a 4% assumed return produce the monthly contribution needed under a steady-growth assumption.
FAQ
How much should I save each month for a $50,000 goal?
The answer depends on your starting balance, timeline, and interest rate. With $10,000 already saved and five years remaining, the required monthly amount is much lower than starting from zero.
Should I include investment returns in a short-term goal?
For a near-term goal, using a conservative cash yield may be more appropriate than assuming stock-market returns. Money needed soon generally should not rely on volatile growth.
What if I cannot afford the required monthly amount?
Extend the timeline, reduce the target, increase income, redirect spending, or combine several smaller changes. Testing scenarios can reveal a realistic plan.
Where should I keep savings for a goal?
The appropriate account depends on timing, liquidity, insurance protection, taxes, and risk. Short-term funds are commonly kept in insured deposit accounts or other low-volatility options.
Does the calculator account for taxes on interest?
No. Taxable interest can reduce the amount retained, so consider using a lower after-tax rate when relevant.
Should I automate my monthly savings?
Automatic transfers can improve consistency by moving money shortly after income arrives, before it is spent elsewhere.
Common mistakes
- Using an investment return for short-term cash.
- Ignoring inflation in a long-term goal.
- Forgetting irregular expenses.
- Assuming every month will have the same contribution.
Tips
- Use separate accounts for separate goals.
- Automate contributions after payday.
- Recalculate after rate or timeline changes.
- Use conservative returns for near-term goals.
Sources and editorial review
Educational estimates only; not personalized financial, tax, legal, lending, investment, or insurance advice.