Investment Calculator

Calculate investment returns, compound growth, and portfolio performance.

Investment Details

Advanced Settings

Future Value

$300,851

After 20 years

Total Contributions

$130,000

Money you invest

Total Earnings

$170,851

Investment growth

Real Value

$166,574

Inflation adjusted

After Tax

$266,681

20% on gains

Investment Summary

Return on Investment:131.4%
Wealth Multiplier:2.3x
Money-Weighted Return (IRR):7.0%

Projected Growth

Indigo = investment growth, gray = money you contributed.

Where the Money Comes From

Investment Tips

  • • Start investing early to maximize compound growth
  • • Consistent monthly contributions create steady wealth building
  • • Diversify across different asset classes and markets
  • • Keep fees low to maximize your returns
  • • Stay invested through market ups and downs

How it works

An investment calculator projects how an initial amount plus regular contributions grow at a compounding rate of return. The starting sum compounds on its own, while each contribution becomes its own compounding stream — together they form the future value. Small changes in rate or time horizon produce large differences at the end because growth is exponential.

Future value with contributions

FV = PV(1 + r)ⁿ + PMT · [(1 + r)ⁿ − 1] / r
FV
future value (ending balance)
PV
present value (initial investment)
PMT
contribution each period
r
return per period
n
number of periods

Worked example

  • Initial PV = $10,000
  • Contribution = $500/month at 7% annual (~0.583%/month)
  • Horizon = 20 years (n = 240)
  1. Initial grows: 10,000 × 1.00583²⁴⁰ ≈ $40,400
  2. Contributions grow: 500 × [(1.00583²⁴⁰ − 1)/0.00583] ≈ $260,500

Future value ≈ $300,900 from $130,000 contributed — about $171,000 is pure growth.

Good to know

  • The same $500/month started 10 years earlier roughly doubles the ending balance — time in the market beats timing it.
  • Returns shown are nominal. After ~3% inflation, a 7% return is closer to 4% in real purchasing power.
  • Fees compound against you: a 1% annual fee can erode 20%+ of your final balance over decades.
  • Projections assume a steady rate; real markets are volatile, so treat the result as a long-run average, not a guarantee.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How does this calculator project investment growth?

It compounds your starting balance at the assumed return and adds your regular contributions, which themselves start compounding: FV = P(1+r)ⁿ plus the future value of the contribution stream. Small changes in return or time horizon produce large differences in the result.

What rate of return should I assume?

The S&P 500 has historically averaged about 10% per year nominal — roughly 7% after inflation — over long periods, but returns vary widely year to year and decade to decade. Conservative planning often uses 5-7% real to avoid overpromising.

How much difference do regular contributions make?

A large one. $500/month at 7% grows to roughly $260,000 in 20 years and $610,000 in 30 — most of the ending balance comes from compounding on early contributions. Consistency matters more than timing the market.

Should I look at nominal or inflation-adjusted results?

Inflation-adjusted (real) figures tell you what the money will actually buy. A nominal $1 million in 30 years is worth around $410,000 in today's dollars at 3% inflation. Use real returns when planning toward concrete goals like retirement spending.

How does my time horizon change the picture?

Compounding is exponential, so the last years contribute the most growth: at 7%, money doubles roughly every 10 years. Starting 10 years earlier can nearly double an ending balance even with the same total contributions — time in the market is the biggest lever you control.