Compound Interest Calculator
Calculate compound interest online. Use this free compounding interest calculator to project investment growth, track savings deposits, and map future wealth.
Compound Interest Calculator — How It Works
The Compound Interest Calculator is a professional financial math resource that models how money multiplies over time when earnings generate their own earnings. Unlike simple yield schedules where growth applies only to your base sum, compounding continuously amplifies your returns, transforming small periodic deposits into substantial nest eggs. When you input your starting principal, add regular periodic contributions, and specify a rate, the system computes your multi-year balance projection in real-time. This interactive tool enables savers, retirement planners, and investors to map their wealth trajectory using clear, factual data points.
The Formula and Methodology
Our tool implements standard financial compounding principles recognized by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). To model scenarios that include periodic deposits, we employ two integrated formulas. First, for the initial investment principal, we apply the standard compound equation:
A = P * (1 + r/n)^(n*t)
Second, for ongoing monthly contributions, we apply the future value of an annuity formula:
A_contrib = PMT * [((1 + r/n)^(n*t) - 1) / (r/n)]
Where:
- A is the final investment balance.
- P is the initial principal investment.
- PMT represents the recurring contribution amount.
- r is the nominal annual interest rate (as a decimal).
- n is the compounding frequency per year (e.g., 12 for monthly, 365 for daily).
- t represents the duration in years.
For example, if you start with an initial investment of $5,000 and contribute $100 at the end of every month at a 6% annual rate compounding monthly for 10 years, the model tracks 120 cycles. The original $5,000 principal grows to $9,096.98. Meanwhile, the recurring monthly contributions of $100 accumulate to $16,387.93. Combined, your final balance reaches $25,484.91, consisting of $17,000 in total deposits and $8,484.91 in total interest earned. This level of calculation precision ensures you can plan your path with maximum assurance.
When to Use This Tool
This tracking interface serves several everyday financial scenarios. First, you can use it to map the compound growth of high-yield savings accounts or certificates of deposit (CDs), which compound interest daily or monthly. Second, it helps long-term index fund investors evaluate potential capital growth inside tax-advantaged retirement vehicles like IRAs or 401(k) plans over 20, 30, or 40 years. Third, parents can estimate college savings progress by seeing how small $50 monthly contributions compound from a child's birth until they turn 18. Each plan can be customized using different frequencies to find your optimal path. Check our details in the frequently asked questions to compare different models.
Understanding Your Results
The output area delivers a complete, logical diagnostic of your wealth projection. The primary headline shows your absolute future balance, which represents your total cumulative worth at the end of your timeline. Underneath, three distinct modules break down this final sum: Initial Principal (the absolute cash you used to open the account), Total Contributions (the sum of all recurring deposits), and Total Interest Earned (the aggregate growth generated by compounding). You can use the visual toggles to switch between a year-by-year accumulation curve and a distribution doughnut chart to observe exactly what percentage of your final balance consists of pure profit versus your own hard-earned savings.
Limitations
While our compound calculation engine is highly precise, real-world finance introduces variables that standard formulas cannot fully model. First, this calculator assumes a fixed interest rate throughout the entire duration. Real index funds and variable-rate bank accounts experience regular market volatility and rate shifts. Second, the calculations do not deduct federal, state, or capital gains taxes, which can reduce your actual take-home growth. Third, these figures do not account for annual inflation, which reduces the purchasing power of your future dollars over long durations. We advise matching these projections with real inflation estimates of 2% to 3% annually for realistic long-range planning.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answers to frequently asked questions.