How Compound Interest Actually Works
The compound interest formula — A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt) + PMT × [((1 + r/n)^(nt) - 1) / (r/n)] — breaks into two pieces: growth on your initial lump sum and growth on your periodic contributions. The variable n is your compounding frequency. Most brokerage and savings accounts compound monthly (n = 12), which means each month's gains immediately start generating their own returns the following month.
The difference between annual and monthly compounding is measurable but not dramatic. A $10,000 deposit at 7% for 30 years grows to $76,123 with annual compounding versus $81,165 with monthly compounding — a $5,042 gap. That gap widens with higher rates and longer time horizons. This calculator uses monthly compounding to match real-world account behavior.
The Rule of 72: Quick Mental Math
Divide 72 by your annual return rate to estimate how many years it takes to double your money. At 7%, your investment doubles roughly every 10.3 years. At 10%, every 7.2 years. At the current high-yield savings rate of ~4.3% (March 2026), about 16.7 years.
The rule is most accurate between 4% and 12%. Below or above that range, use 69.3 divided by the rate for a tighter estimate. For practical planning: $50,000 at 7% becomes roughly $100,000 in year 10, $200,000 in year 20, and $400,000 in year 31. Three doublings from doing nothing except staying invested.
Real vs. Nominal Returns: What Inflation Costs You
The S&P 500 has averaged approximately 10% nominal returns annually since 1926. After adjusting for inflation (historically ~3% per year), the real return drops to roughly 7%. That distinction matters enormously over long time horizons.
Using this calculator with a 10% return shows your nominal future balance. To see purchasing power in today's dollars, use 7% instead. Concretely: $10,000 with $500/month at 10% for 30 years produces $1,133,830. At 7% (inflation-adjusted), the same inputs yield $610,727. The gap — $523,103 — represents money that exists on paper but buys no more than today's dollars would. Use the 7% figure when asking "will I have enough to retire on?" and the 10% figure when projecting nominal account balances.
The Cost of Waiting: Starting at 25 vs. 35
A 25-year-old investing $500/month at 7% until age 65 accumulates $1,197,811 on $240,000 in total contributions. A 35-year-old with the same $500/month at 7% until 65 ends with $566,765 on $180,000 in contributions. Starting ten years earlier produces $631,046 more — on just $60,000 of additional contributions.
Put differently, the 25-year-old's money multiplied 5.0x. The 35-year-old's multiplied 3.1x. Those first ten years of compounding generated more wealth than the next twenty. If you are 35 and just starting, you would need to invest roughly $1,060/month to match the 25-year-old's outcome — more than double the monthly amount to compensate for the lost decade.
Tax-Advantaged vs. Taxable Accounts
Compound growth in a 401(k) or Roth IRA is sheltered from annual taxation. In a taxable brokerage account, dividends and realized capital gains erode your compounding each year. Assuming a 7% return with 2% distributed as qualified dividends taxed at 15%, a taxable account effectively earns about 6.7% — a 0.3% annual drag that compounds into a significant gap.
Over 30 years on $500/month: a tax-sheltered account at 7% grows to roughly $610,727. A taxable account with the same underlying return but annual dividend taxation might net closer to $575,000. The ~$35,700 difference is the tax cost of compounding in a taxable wrapper. Max out your 401(k) ($23,500 limit in 2026) and IRA ($7,000 limit) before routing additional savings to taxable accounts. For those over 50, catch-up contributions add $7,500 to the 401(k) limit.
Increasing Contributions Over Time
Most people earn more as their career progresses, and bumping contributions by even 3% annually makes a substantial difference. Starting with $500/month and increasing 3% each year (roughly tracking inflation and career wage growth), your total contributions over 30 years rise from $180,000 to $285,362. But the ending balance at 7% jumps from $610,727 to approximately $867,000 — an extra $256,000 from gradually stepping up what you set aside.
A practical approach: set your brokerage or 401(k) contribution to auto-increase by 1% of salary each January. You absorb the increase before lifestyle inflation does, and the compounding benefit accelerates over time. This calculator uses a fixed monthly contribution, so to model escalating contributions, run it several times with increasing monthly amounts for different career phases.