Compound Interest Calculator
Calculate how your investments grow over time with the power of compounding.
Future Value Projection
Total Principal Invested
$0
Total Interest Earned
$0
Final Portfolio Value
$0
Understanding Compound Interest: How Your Money Makes Money
Albert Einstein reportedly famously called compound interest the "eighth wonder of the world," stating, "He who understands it, earns it; he who doesn't, pays it." While the attribution might be apocryphal, the sentiment is entirely accurate in the world of finance. Compound interest is the fundamental force that allows modest savings to grow into substantial wealth over time.
What is Compound Interest?
At its core, compounding is the process of earning interest on your interest. Unlike "simple interest," where you only earn a return on your original principal amount, compound interest means your investment returns are added back to your principal base. In the next period, you earn returns on the new, larger base.
This creates a snowball effect. Initially, the growth seems slow. However, as the interest accumulates, the growth curve accelerates dramatically, especially over long time horizons.
Key Components of Compounding
- Principal: The initial amount of money you invest.
- Contributions: Regular additions made to the investment (e.g., $200 a month).
- Rate of Return: The annual percentage growth you expect to earn (e.g., historically, the S&P 500 has averaged around 10% annually before inflation).
- Time Horizon: How long you let the money grow. Time is the most critical ingredient in compounding.
- Compounding Frequency: How often interest is calculated and added to the principal (annually, quarterly, monthly, or daily). More frequent compounding leads to slightly higher returns.
A Realistic Example
Let's use our calculator above to demonstrate the power of time. Imagine two individuals:
- Investor A starts at age 25, investing $300 a month until age 35 (10 years), and then stops contributing but lets the money sit until age 65. Assuming an 8% annual return compounded annually.
- Investor B waits until age 35 to start, investing $300 a month until age 65 (30 years). Assuming the same 8% annual return compounded annually.
Despite Investor B contributing three times as much capital ($108,000 vs. $36,000), Investor A will often end up with a larger final portfolio balance because their money had an extra decade to compound. The early years of compounding are crucial because the "interest on interest" effect has longer to work.
Using This Calculator
This tool helps you visualize your potential financial future. Adjust the initial investment, increase your monthly contributions, or extend your timeframe to see how small changes today can lead to significant differences in your future wealth. Remember that while calculators provide projections based on constant rates, actual market returns vary from year to year.