
Compound Interest Calculator
Enter the starting amount, interest rate, investment duration and compounding frequency below to see the results.
More Calculators
How the Compound Interest Calculator Works
The calculator uses:
Understanding Compound Interest
For example, compounding monthly typically results in a higher final value than compounding annually using the same interest rate and duration.
Because of this, results from a compound interest calculator may differ from simpler investment calculators that assume basic annual growth.
Example 1: The Power of Time (10 Years vs 20 Years)
Imagine you invest a single lump sum of £5,000 into an index fund with an average annual return of 7%, compounding annually:
– After 10 years, your investment will have grown to £9,835 (earning £4,835 in interest).
– If you leave it for 20 years, it doesn’t just double—it grows to £19,348.
Takeaway: In the second decade, you earn almost double the interest you did in the first decade without adding a single extra penny of your own money. That is the power of compounding.
Example 2: Annual vs. Monthly Compounding
Does the compounding frequency really matter? Let’s look at a £10,000 savings account earning 5% over 5 years:
– If interest compounds annually (once a year), you will end up with £12,762.82.
– If interest compounds monthly (12 times a year), you will end up with £12,833.59.
Takeaway: Monthly compounding gives you slightly more money because your interest begins earning its own interest much sooner.
When Should You Use a Compound Interest Calculator?
About This Compound Interest Calculator
Results do not account for fees, taxes, inflation or changes in interest rates. Actual outcomes may vary.
Our mission here at CalcHub is to create a valuablke resource our users can come back to again and again with no sign-ups, no barriers etc. Check out how we build our calculators here.
Please note: When investing in the stock market or crypto, your capital is at risk and returns are never guaranteed. For impartial UK financial guidance, visit MoneyHelper.
Frequently Asked Questions
Simple interest is calculated only on your original deposit. If you invest £1,000 at 5% simple interest, you earn exactly £50 every year, forever. Compound interest is calculated on the original deposit plus the interest you’ve already earned. With compounding, you earn £50 in year one, but in year two you earn 5% on £1,050 (which is £52.50), and the amount grows every year.
Because interest is added more frequently, allowing interest to earn interest sooner.
No. This is a pure mathematical calculation. In the real world, you must consider that inflation reduces the purchasing power of your money over time. Additionally, unless your money is protected in a tax-free wrapper like a UK ISA, you may owe Capital Gains Tax or Income Tax on the interest you earn.
Yes. It can be used for both, provided the interest compounds regularly.
Yes. All calculators on Calchub are free to use. You’re welcome to bookmark any of your favourites and use them as much as you would like.
