Compound Interest Calculator

Use this compound interest calculator calculator to understand your numbers quickly and make clearer decisions with confidence.

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Compound Interest Calculator
4 Modes · Year-by-Year Schedule · Contributions · Inflation-Adjusted
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Compounding Frequency

What Is Compound Interest?

Compound interest is interest calculated on both the initial principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. Unlike simple interest — which only earns on your original deposit — compound interest earns interest on interest, creating an exponential growth curve that dramatically accelerates wealth over time. Albert Einstein reportedly called it "the eighth wonder of the world."

Use the compound interest calculator above to model any scenario instantly — from a simple savings account to a 30-year investment with monthly contributions — with a full year-by-year growth schedule.

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Savings & CDs

Banks compound interest daily or monthly on savings accounts and CDs. Even a 0.1% difference in compounding frequency adds hundreds of dollars on large balances.

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Investments & ETFs

Stock market returns compound through dividend reinvestment and price appreciation. $10,000 at 10% for 30 years = $174,494 — compound interest accounts for 94% of that.

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Debt (The Dark Side)

Credit card debt compounds monthly at 20–30% APR. A $5,000 balance at 24% APR left unpaid doubles in 3 years. Understanding compound interest cuts both ways.

The Compound Interest Formulas

There are three core compound interest formulas covering every real-world scenario. Master these and you can verify any bank, broker, or financial advisor claim in seconds.

① Standard Compound Interest Formula

Use when: lump-sum deposit, no additional contributions.

A = P × (1 + rn)nt
SymbolMeaningExample
AFinal account balance (future value)→ $19,672
PPrincipal — your initial deposit$10,000
rAnnual interest rate as a decimal (APR ÷ 100)0.07 (= 7%)
nCompounding periods per year12 (monthly), 365 (daily)
tTime in years10

Worked example: $10,000 at 7% APR, compounded monthly (n = 12) for 10 years:
A = $10,000 × (1 + 0.07÷12)12×10 = $10,000 × (1.005833)120 = $20,097
Interest earned: $10,097 — your money more than doubled in 10 years without adding a single dollar.

② Compound Interest With Regular Contributions (FV of Annuity)

Use when: you make regular monthly/annual deposits in addition to the initial principal.

A = P(1 + rn)nt + PMT × (1 + r/n)nt − 1r/n
SymbolMeaningExample
AFinal balance including all contributions and compound growth→ $103,930
PInitial principal / starting balance$10,000
PMTRegular contribution per compounding period$500/month
rAPR as a decimal0.07
nCompounding periods per year12
tTime in years10

Worked example: $10,000 + $500/month at 7% APR (monthly) for 10 years:
Balance = $20,097 (principal growth) + $87,069 (contribution growth) = $107,166
Total deposited: $70,000 ($10K + 120 × $500). Interest earned: $37,166 — compound growth added 53% on top of your deposits.

③ Continuous Compounding

Use when: n → ∞ (theoretical maximum — approximated by high-frequency DeFi protocols).

A = P × ert
SymbolMeaningExample
AFinal balance with continuous compounding→ $20,138
eEuler's number ≈ 2.71828 (base of natural log)2.71828
rAPR as a decimal0.07
tTime in years10

Worked example: $10,000 at 7% continuous for 10 years:
A = $10,000 × e0.07 × 10 = $10,000 × e0.7 = $10,000 × 2.0138 = $20,138
Only $41 more than daily compounding ($20,097) — past monthly frequency, gains diminish rapidly.

Compound interest growth chart: $10,000 over 30 years comparing simple interest, annual compounding, and daily compounding at 7% APR

$10,000 at 7% APR over 30 years: daily compounding ($76,123) vs simple interest ($31,000) — a $45,123 difference. See the formula to understand why.

Compound vs Simple Interest: The Numbers Don't Lie

Simple interest is linear — you earn the same fixed dollar amount every year. Compound interest is exponential — each year's earnings become next year's principal, creating a snowball effect that grows faster and faster over time.

$10,000 at 7% APRSimple InterestCompound (Annual)Compound (Monthly)Compounding Bonus
5 years$13,500$14,026$14,176+$676
10 years$17,000$19,672$20,097+$3,097
20 years$24,000$38,697$40,694+$16,694
30 years$31,000$76,123$81,165+$50,165
40 years$38,000$149,745$162,297+$124,297

All values: $10,000 initial principal, 7% APR, no additional contributions. Use the compound interest calculator to model your specific scenario.

How Compounding Frequency Affects Growth

The more frequently interest compounds, the higher your effective APY — but with diminishing returns past monthly compounding. Here's $10,000 at 7% APR over 10 years across all standard frequencies:

Frequencyn (periods/yr)Effective APYBalance (10 yrs)vs Annual
Annually17.000%$19,672
Semiannually27.123%$19,799+$127
Quarterly47.186%$19,864+$192
Monthly127.229%$20,097+$425
Weekly527.246%$20,116+$444
Daily3657.250%$20,137+$465
Continuous7.251%$20,138+$466

The jump from annual to monthly ($425 extra) is far more significant than monthly to daily ($40 extra). For most savers, monthly-compounding accounts capture 91% of the maximum possible benefit.

Adding Regular Contributions: Where Real Wealth Is Built

The compound interest formula with regular contributions reveals why consistent monthly investing — even in small amounts — produces dramatically better outcomes than lump-sum investing alone. The With Contributions mode above calculates this precisely for any scenario.

ScenarioAfter 10 yrsAfter 20 yrsAfter 30 yrsKey Takeaway
$10K, no contributions$20,097$40,388$81,165Lump-sum baseline
$0 + $500/mo$86,727$239,695$566,765Consistent beats lump-sum
$10K + $200/mo$55,309$144,469$349,267Hybrid approach
$10K + $500/mo$107,166$288,540$675,965Aggressive accumulation
$10K + $1,000/mo$193,637$537,236$1,270,765Maximum-contribution path

All scenarios: 7% APR, monthly compounding. Compare with our Investment Calculator for dividend-reinvestment modeling.

🔑 The Most Important Compound Interest Insight

Notice that $0 starting balance + $500/month ($86,727 at 10 years) beats a $10,000 lump sum with no contributions ($20,097) by $66,630 — and this gap grows to $485,600 by year 30. Consistency beats one-time action in compound interest, every single time. Start today, even with a small amount. Use the calculator above to find your number.

The Rule of 72: Your Mental Shortcut

The Rule of 72 is a fast mental math shortcut: divide 72 by your annual interest rate to estimate how many years it takes to double your money.

Years to double ≈ 72r
Rate (APR)Rule of 72 Est.Exact YearsReal-World Context
1%72 yrs69.7 yrsFDIC savings average (~0.58%)
2%36 yrs35.0 yrsI-Bonds, TIPS (inflation-adjusted)
4%18 yrs17.7 yrsHigh-yield savings (2024–25)
7%10.3 yrs10.2 yrsS&P 500 historical average (inflation-adj.)
10%7.2 yrs7.3 yrsS&P 500 nominal historical average
15%4.8 yrs4.96 yrsAggressive growth portfolios
24%3.0 yrs3.22 yrsTypical credit card APR (debt doubles fast!)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between compound and simple interest?

Simple interest is calculated only on the principal: Interest = P × r × t. Compound interest is calculated on principal plus accumulated interest: A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt). Over 30 years at 7%, $10,000 grows to $31,000 with simple interest and $81,165 with monthly compounding — a $50,165 difference that is entirely the compounding effect.

How often should interest compound for maximum growth?

Daily compounding provides the highest return for any given APR, but the difference between monthly and daily is minimal — only $40 more on $10,000 over 10 years at 7%. Chasing daily vs monthly compounding matters far less than finding the highest APR available. Use our APY Calculator to compare effective yields across different frequencies.

What is the Rule of 72 and how accurate is it?

Divide 72 by your annual interest rate to estimate how many years it takes to double your money. At 7%: 72÷7 = 10.3 years (actual: 10.2 years). The rule works best for rates between 6% and 10%, with slight over-estimation at higher rates. It's perfect for quick mental math and financial planning conversations.

How does compound interest work on a 401(k) or IRA?

Retirement accounts compound through dividend reinvestment and capital appreciation. A $6,500 annual IRA contribution at 7% average growth for 30 years totals $656,000 — of which $461,000 is compound growth on top of $195,000 contributed. The tax-deferred status of traditional IRAs or tax-free status of Roth IRAs amplifies this further by letting you reinvest what would otherwise be paid in taxes.

Can compound interest work against me?

Absolutely — it is the engine behind debt spirals. A $5,000 credit card balance at 24% APR compounds monthly. If you only make minimum payments, you could pay for 10+ years and still owe more than you started with. The same mathematical force that builds wealth can destroy it. Always calculate compound interest on debt before assuming minimum payments are manageable.

What is a realistic return to use in compound interest calculations?

S&P 500 historical average: 10.5% nominal, 7% inflation-adjusted. Diversified portfolio: 6–8%. High-yield savings (2024–25): 4.5–5.5% APY. CDs (2024–25): 4.5–5.25% APY. Traditional bank savings: 0.01–0.5%. Always distinguish between nominal (before inflation) and real (after inflation) returns for long-term planning.

Related Financial Calculators

Use the Compound Interest Calculator alongside these tools for complete financial planning:

  • Investment Calculator

    Model compound growth with dividend reinvestment, inflation adjustment, and SIP scenarios — the next level of compound interest planning.

  • APY Calculator

    Convert any APR to its true Annual Percentage Yield across any compounding frequency — use it to compare savings accounts and CDs accurately.

  • Loan Calculator

    Compound interest works against you on loans. Calculate total interest cost, monthly payments, and payoff timelines for mortgages and personal loans.

  • Profit Margin Calculator

    Business owners: ensure your profit margins exceed your cost of capital (your borrowing APR) — compound interest on reinvested profits builds enterprise value.

  • Pay Raise Calculator

    Model the long-term compound effect of a salary raise. A 5% raise invested monthly at 7% creates dramatically different outcomes than spending it.

  • Salary to Hourly Calculator

    Calculate your true hourly rate, then model how many hours of work equals compound interest earnings — a powerful perspective on savings rates.

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