📈 Finance Calculator

Investment Return Calculator

Project the future value of your investments with compound interest, regular contributions, inflation adjustment, and management fee impact. Visualize your wealth over time.

Investment Parameters
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Optional Adjustments
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The Complete Guide to Investment Returns & Compound Growth

Investing is the single most powerful tool available to ordinary people for building long-term wealth. The mathematics of compound interest means that time in the market is more valuable than almost any other factor — including timing the market, picking winning stocks, or waiting for the "right" moment to invest.

How Compound Interest Works

Simple interest grows linearly: a 7% return on $10,000 gives you $700 per year, every year. Compound interest is fundamentally different — each year's gains are added to the principal, so next year's gains are calculated on a larger base. This creates exponential, not linear, growth.

The formula for compound growth is:

FV = P × (1 + r)n
Where: P = principal, r = annual rate (decimal), n = years

For a portfolio with regular contributions, we add an annuity term:

FV = P × (1 + r)n + PMT × ((1 + r)n − 1) / r
Where: PMT = annual contribution (monthly × 12)

The result is dramatic: $10,000 invested at 7% annually becomes $76,123 after 30 years with no additional contributions. Add $500/month and it grows to over $660,000. The difference is almost entirely attributable to the compounding of returns on reinvested gains.

The Rule of 72

A quick mental shortcut: divide 72 by your annual return rate to estimate how many years it takes to double your money. At 7%, your investment doubles approximately every 72 ÷ 7 ≈ 10.3 years. At 10%, every 7.2 years. This rule helps you quickly grasp the power of higher returns and longer time horizons without a calculator.

Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA)

Dollar-cost averaging means investing a fixed amount at regular intervals regardless of market conditions. When markets are down, your fixed contribution buys more shares; when markets are up, it buys fewer. Over time, this averages out your cost basis and removes the psychological pressure of trying to "time the market."

Decades of research support DCA as an effective strategy for long-term investors. It reduces the risk of investing a lump sum at a market peak, forces consistent saving behavior, and removes emotional decision-making from the process. The monthly contribution field in this calculator models exactly this strategy.

The Devastating Impact of Management Fees

Fund management fees — expressed as an annual expense ratio — may seem small in isolation, but their compounded impact over decades is enormous. Consider a 30-year, $10,000 initial + $500/month investment at 7% gross return:

A seemingly small 2% fee consumes approximately 31% of your final portfolio value over 30 years. This is why low-cost index funds and ETFs have become the dominant recommendation among financial academics and planners. The evidence that active management consistently outperforms its fees over the long run is, to put it generously, weak.

Inflation and Real Returns

Nominal returns tell you how much your portfolio grew in dollar terms. Real returns tell you how much your purchasing power grew — which is what actually matters for retirement planning. With 2.5% annual inflation, $660,000 in 30 years buys what approximately $316,000 buys today.

The real return is calculated using the Fisher equation:

Real Rate = ((1 + nominal rate) / (1 + inflation rate)) − 1
Example: (1.07 / 1.025) − 1 ≈ 4.39% real return at 7% nominal, 2.5% inflation

Historical U.S. equity returns (S&P 500) have averaged approximately 10% nominal and 7% real (inflation-adjusted) over the long run, though past performance doesn't guarantee future results.

Starting Early vs. Starting Late: The Time Premium

The most powerful lever in investing is time. Consider two investors who both invest $500/month at 7% annual returns:

Investor A contributed $60,000 more ($240K vs. $180K) but ended up with twice as much wealth. Those extra 10 years of compounding are worth $660,000. This is why the most consistent advice from financial planners is: start as early as possible, even with small amounts.

Asset Allocation and Expected Returns

The return rate you enter is the most impactful variable in any long-term projection, and it's also the most uncertain. Reasonable historical benchmarks:

Note that these are long-run historical averages. Any given decade can deviate significantly. The appropriate return assumption depends on your asset allocation, investment horizon, and risk tolerance.

What annual return rate should I use?
For a diversified global stock portfolio, 7% nominal (or about 4–5% real) is a commonly used conservative estimate based on long-run historical averages. For a conservative mixed portfolio, 5–6% is more appropriate. Always model multiple scenarios — try 5%, 7%, and 9% to understand the range of outcomes.
How does monthly contribution compounding work?
This calculator assumes annual compounding with monthly contributions summed yearly (PMT = monthly × 12). This is a standard approximation. The difference between monthly and annual compounding at 7% over 30 years is typically less than 3%, so this simplification doesn't materially affect projections.
Should I factor in taxes?
For tax-advantaged accounts (401k, IRA, Roth IRA, ISA), this calculator's output is a good approximation of pre-tax or tax-free growth. For taxable brokerage accounts, annual dividend and capital gains taxes will reduce effective returns — the impact depends on your tax bracket and how actively you trade.
What management fee rate should I use?
Broad market index funds and ETFs typically charge 0.03%–0.20% annually. Target-date retirement funds average 0.1%–0.5%. Actively managed mutual funds average 0.5%–1.5%. Financial advisors using a percentage-of-assets fee model typically charge 0.5%–1.5% on top of fund expenses.
Is this calculator accurate for retirement planning?
This calculator provides a useful baseline projection but does not account for sequence-of-returns risk (the order of good and bad years matters enormously near retirement), variable contribution amounts, taxation, Social Security, or spending in retirement. For comprehensive retirement planning, consult a fee-only financial planner or use dedicated retirement planning software.