Compound Interest Calculator

Calculate compound interest with monthly contributions. See how your money grows over time with different compounding frequencies and rates.

$
$
%
yrs
Future Value
Total Contributions
Interest Earned
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
$
$
%
Final Balance
Total Deposited
Interest Earned
Growth Multiple
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail
$
$
%
%
%
%

Growth Summary

Nominal Future Value
Real Value (Inflation-Adjusted)
Total Contributions
Total Interest Earned

Rate Analysis

Effective APY
Rule of 72 — Doubling Time
Real Return Rate

Tax Impact

After-Tax Value (approx)

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your Initial Principal — the starting amount you are investing.
  2. Set a Monthly Contribution — even small regular deposits make a big difference.
  3. Enter the Annual Interest Rate — use expected returns for your investment type.
  4. Set the Time Period in years to see long-term growth.
  5. Choose a Compound Frequency — monthly is standard for most savings accounts.

Formula

Compound Interest Formula:

A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt) + PMT × [(1 + r/n)^(nt) − 1] / (r/n)

  • A = Future value
  • P = Principal (initial investment)
  • r = Annual interest rate (decimal)
  • n = Compounding periods per year
  • t = Time in years
  • PMT = Regular contribution per period

Example

Example: $10,000 initial investment, $200/month, 7% annual return, 20 years, monthly compounding.

  • Total Contributions: $10,000 + ($200 × 240) = $58,000
  • Interest Earned: $91,860
  • Future Value: $149,860
  • Your money grew by 2.58× what you put in.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Compound interest is interest calculated on both the initial principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. This "interest on interest" effect causes investments to grow exponentially over time.
  • More frequent compounding leads to slightly higher returns. Daily compounding yields marginally more than monthly, which yields more than annual. The difference becomes more significant with larger amounts and longer periods.
  • The Rule of 72 estimates how long it takes to double your money: divide 72 by the annual interest rate. At 7% annual return, your investment doubles in approximately 72 ÷ 7 = 10.3 years.
  • The US stock market (S&P 500) has historically returned about 10% annually before inflation, or about 7% after inflation. Bonds average 3–5%. Your actual return depends on asset allocation and market conditions.
  • Regular contributions dramatically accelerate wealth accumulation. Contributing $200/month at 7% for 30 years grows to over $227,000 from just $72,000 in contributions — thanks to compound growth.

Related Calculators

Sources & References (5)
  1. SEC Investor.gov — Compound Interest Calculator — U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
  2. Federal Reserve — The Power of Compounding — Federal Reserve
  3. FDIC — Money Smart Financial Education — Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
  4. FINRA — Time Value of Money — Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
  5. SEC — Investor Bulletin: How Interest Works — U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission