Compound Interest Calculator

This free online tool calculates how your investment grows over time, taking into account both the initial investment and any recurring contributions. It's useful for anyone planning for retirement, college savings, or other long-term financial goals.

S. Siddiqui

Edited by

S. SiddiquiFounder & Editor-in-Chief
Sources:IRSFederal ReserveCFPBSECUpdated May 2026

Disclaimer: This tool is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or investment advice. Please consult a qualified financial advisor or CPA before making financial decisions.

Investment Details

$
$
%
yrs

Future Value

$144,573

after 20 years

Total Contributed

$58,000

Interest Earned

$86,573

40%
60%
Contributions (40%)Interest (60%)

Wealth Growth Over Time

Growth Milestones

YearContributedInterestTotal Value
Year 2$14,800$1,834$16,634
Year 4$19,600$4,662$24,262
Year 6$24,400$8,633$33,033
Year 8$29,200$13,918$43,118
Year 10$34,000$20,714$54,714
Year 12$38,800$29,246$68,046
Year 14$43,600$39,776$83,376
Year 16$48,400$52,603$101,003
Year 18$53,200$68,070$121,270
Year 20$58,000$86,573$144,573

What Is the Compound Interest Calculator?

Compound interest is the process by which interest earned on a balance is added back to that balance, so future interest is calculated on a larger amount. Over time, this snowball effect can turn modest, regular savings into a surprisingly large sum. The compound interest calculator lets you figure out how much a lump sum or a series of regular contributions will grow over a given period, so you can see the real power of consistent saving and investing in concrete terms.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission describes compound interest as one of the most powerful forces in personal finance, precisely because the returns themselves start generating returns. The longer the time horizon, the more pronounced the effect becomes, which is why starting early matters so much even when the amounts involved are small.

How to Use the Calculator

  1. Enter your starting amount, also called the principal or lump sum.
  2. Add a regular contribution if you plan to add money periodically, and set the frequency to monthly or annually.
  3. Enter the annual interest rate or expected rate of return.
  4. Set the compounding frequency. Options typically include daily, monthly, quarterly, and annually. More frequent compounding produces a slightly higher return.
  5. Choose the time period in years.
  6. The result shows your projected final balance broken down into principal, contributions, and interest earned.

For a broader view of your saving and investing approach, you can pair this with our Investment Return Calculator to account for more complex scenarios.

The Formula Explained

The standard compound interest formula for a lump sum is:

A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt)

Where:

  • A = the final amount
  • P = the initial principal
  • r = the annual interest rate (as a decimal)
  • n = the number of times interest compounds per year
  • t = the number of years

The Investor.gov compound interest tool from the U.S. government uses this same methodology and is a useful reference for verifying your figures.

To put that into context, $10,000 invested at 7% compounded annually for 30 years grows to approximately $76,123. The same sum compounded monthly at the same rate grows to around $81,165 because interest is being added more frequently, giving the balance more opportunities to grow. That said, the difference between monthly and daily compounding is usually quite small in practice.

Principal Rate Years Compounding Final Balance
$10,000 5% 10 Annually $16,289
$10,000 7% 20 Monthly $40,398
$5,000 6% 30 Monthly $29,227

Key Considerations

The rate you enter has an outsized effect on the outcome over long time horizons. A difference of just one or two percentage points, compounded over 20 or 30 years, can mean tens of thousands of dollars in the final balance. In line with that, it is worth being realistic about the rate you use. Historical stock market returns have averaged roughly 7% per year after inflation over the long run, but past performance does not guarantee future results.

Inflation is the other side of the coin. A nominal return of 6% in a 3% inflation environment delivers a real return of roughly 3%. As a result, it is worth looking at both the nominal figure the calculator gives you and what that sum is likely to buy in the future. Some calculators allow you to enter an inflation rate to see results in today's money.

On top of that, taxes can eat into compounding returns depending on where the money is held. Investments inside tax-advantaged accounts like a 401(k) or ISA compound without being reduced by annual tax, which can make a significant difference over long periods compared to a taxable account.

What to Do With Your Result

If the projected balance looks smaller than you hoped, even small changes to the inputs can carry a big impact. Increasing your regular contribution by a modest amount each month, or starting a few years earlier, often has a larger effect than chasing a higher rate of return. With that in mind, the calculator is most useful when you run several scenarios side by side to understand which levers are worth pulling.

If you are planning for a specific goal like retirement, our Retirement Calculator builds on this by factoring in additional contributions, projected income needs, and drawdown timing.

Conclusion

Compound interest is one of the most reliable mechanisms for building wealth over time, and understanding how it works gives you a significant advantage in planning your finances. The calculator makes it easy to come up with realistic projections without needing to carry out any manual maths, so you can focus on making informed decisions about how much to save and where to put it.

Last reviewed: May 31, 2026
Founder's Real-World Experience
S. Siddiqui

S. Siddiqui

Founder & Editor-in-Chief, YourToolsBase

Why I started investing at 33 instead of waiting until 40

For years I kept putting off serious investing, telling myself I would get round to it at 40. In 2025, out of curiosity, I ran a side-by-side comparison in this calculator: £500 per month starting at 33 versus £500 per month starting at 40, both growing at 7% per year until 65. The gap turned out to be enormous. Starting at 33 built up to £786,000; starting at 40 came to £480,000. Seven years of delay would have cost me £306,000 in final value for exactly the same monthly contribution.

That figure is in line with what the SEC describes as the compounding effect of time, but seeing it applied to my own numbers made it real in a way that a general article never had. I started the following month. The calculator did not tell me where to invest; it just made clear what waiting around was actually costing me.

£306K difference7 years earlier7% assumed return
Also used alongside: ROI Calculator

Frequently Asked Questions

How often does interest compound?
The most common compounding frequencies are daily, monthly, quarterly, and annually. More frequent compounding produces a slightly higher final balance because interest is being added to the principal more often, giving the balance more chances to grow. For most savings accounts, compounding is daily or monthly. For investment accounts, the effective compounding frequency depends on how often dividends are reinvested.
What is the Rule of 72?
The Rule of 72 is a quick mental shortcut for estimating how long it takes for an investment to double at a given rate of return. You divide 72 by the annual interest rate to get the approximate number of years. For example, at 6% per year, an investment roughly doubles in 72 / 6 = 12 years. It is an approximation rather than a precise calculation, but it is useful for quickly sizing up the effect of different rates.
What is the difference between simple and compound interest?
Simple interest is calculated only on the original principal. Compound interest is calculated on the principal plus all previously earned interest. Over short periods the difference is small, but over longer time horizons compound interest produces dramatically larger totals because the interest itself keeps earning returns. Virtually all savings accounts and investments use compound interest.
Does compound interest work against me with debt?
Yes. The same mechanics that grow investments over time also apply to debt. Credit card balances and some types of loans compound interest against you, meaning unpaid interest is added to the balance and future interest is charged on the larger amount. This is why carrying a high-interest balance for a long time can make the debt grow faster than you can pay it down.
What rate of return should I use in the calculator?
The right rate depends on what you are projecting. For a savings account, use the actual interest rate on offer. For a diversified investment portfolio, many planners use 5 to 7% per year as a long-run average after inflation, based on historical stock market data. It is worth running both an optimistic and a conservative scenario so you understand the range of possible outcomes rather than relying on a single figure.
How do regular contributions affect compound growth?
Adding regular contributions, even small ones, has a significant effect on the final balance over time. Each contribution starts its own compounding journey from the moment it is added, and contributions made early in the period have the longest time to grow. The calculator shows you the combined effect of your lump sum and ongoing contributions, making it straightforward to see how much of the final balance comes from your deposits versus interest earned.

Formula

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💡 Pro Tip

Starting investing 10 years earlier roughly doubles your final portfolio. Time in the market beats timing the market — always.

About the Author

S. Siddiqui

S. Siddiqui

Founder & Editor-in-Chief

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S. Siddiqui is the founder and editor-in-chief of YourToolsBase, overseeing all content, tool accuracy, and editorial standards.

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Authoritative Sources

Formulas and data in this tool are based on guidelines from the above sources.