Compound Interest Calculator

See how your savings grow with compound interest — including regular monthly contributions.

Advertisement
$
$100$500,000
%
0.5%15%
yrs
1 yr40 yrs
$
$0$5,000
Final Balance
Total Interest Earned
Total Contributions
Return on Investment

Growth Breakdown

Initial Deposit Monthly Contributions Interest Earned

Compound Interest Formula

A = P(1 + r/n)nt + PMT × [((1 + r/n)nt - 1) / (r/n)]
P = Principal  |  r = Annual rate  |  n = Compounding periods/year  |  t = Years  |  PMT = Monthly contribution
Year-by-Year Growth
Year Starting Balance Contributions Interest Ending Balance
Advertisement

Frequently Asked Questions

Compound interest is interest calculated on both your initial principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. This creates exponential growth over time — your interest earns interest. Albert Einstein allegedly called it the "eighth wonder of the world." A $10,000 deposit at 6% for 30 years grows to over $57,000 with compound interest vs. only $28,000 with simple interest.

More frequent compounding generates slightly higher returns at the same stated rate. Daily compounding earns a bit more than monthly, which earns more than quarterly or annually. The difference is subtle — on $10,000 at 6% over 20 years, daily vs annual compounding yields roughly $400 extra. The frequency matters more at higher rates and over longer time horizons.

The Rule of 72 estimates how many years it takes for an investment to double. Simply divide 72 by your annual interest rate. At 6%, money doubles in about 12 years. At 4%, about 18 years. At 9%, about 8 years. It's a handy mental shortcut that works well for rates between 2% and 15%. For more precise calculations, use the full compound interest formula above.

A popular guideline is the 50/30/20 rule: 50% on needs, 30% on wants, 20% on savings. For retirement specifically, many advisors suggest saving 15% of gross income (including employer contributions). The key is to start early — even $100/month invested at 7% for 40 years grows to over $262,000. Use our Savings Goal Calculator to find the exact monthly amount you need for your specific goal.

APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is the stated interest rate without compounding effects. APY (Annual Percentage Yield) reflects the actual return after compounding. Banks are required to advertise APY on savings products. A 6% APR compounded monthly yields an APY of ~6.17%. Always compare APY values when shopping for savings accounts or CDs — a lower APR with daily compounding can beat a higher APR with annual compounding.

For educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Consult a qualified financial advisor.

Advertisement

Rule of 72

Divide 72 by your interest rate to estimate years to double your money.

6% → 12 years
4% → 18 years
8% → 9 years
10% → 7.2 years
Standard compound formula
Updated May 2026
No data stored
Free to use
Advertisement
Data Sources: Freddie Mac PMMS Federal Reserve FDIC IRS No signup required Browser-based calculations