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Financial Calculators

Investment Calculator

Calculate the future value of an investment with compound interest — enter your principal, monthly contributions, interest rate and time horizon to see projected returns.

⚡ Instant calculation 🔒 Private — runs in your browser 🚫 No login required 📋 Copy or download results
📈 Investment Calculator
📈

Enter your figures and click Calculate to see your results.

📖How to Use the Investment Calculator

  1. 1
    Enter your values

    Enter your initial investment, monthly contribution, expected annual return and time horizon to see projected returns with compound interest.

  2. 2
    Click Calculate

    Press the Calculate button. Results appear instantly — all calculations run locally in your browser.

  3. 3
    Review your results

    See your full investment projection including principal, interest earned, total value and growth chart. Use Copy or Download to save your results.

💡When to Use This Calculator

SituationWhy It Helps
Financial planning Make informed decisions
Business analysis Support data-driven choices
Personal finance Understand your numbers

Frequently Asked Questions

What is compound interest?

Compound interest is interest calculated on both the initial principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. Unlike simple interest (calculated only on principal), compound interest grows exponentially — making it the most powerful force in long-term investing. Einstein reportedly called it the eighth wonder of the world.

How does compounding frequency affect returns?

More frequent compounding produces higher returns. Daily compounding yields slightly more than monthly, which yields more than annually. The difference grows significantly over long time horizons. For example, £10,000 at 7% for 30 years: annual compounding gives £76,123 while monthly compounding gives £81,164 — a difference of over £5,000.

What annual return should I use for stock market investments?

The S&P 500 has returned approximately 10% annually before inflation over the long term (around 7% after inflation). UK equities (FTSE All-Share) have returned around 6-8% annually over long periods. For conservative projections use 5-6%, moderate use 7-8%, optimistic use 9-10%. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

How much should I invest monthly?

A common guideline is to invest 15-20% of your gross income for retirement. If you are starting later, you may need to save more. Even small amounts invested consistently make a significant difference due to compounding. £200/month at 7% for 30 years grows to over £227,000 — yet total contributions are only £72,000.

What is the Rule of 72?

The Rule of 72 is a quick mental calculation to estimate how long it takes to double your investment. Divide 72 by your annual interest rate: at 6% your investment doubles in 12 years; at 8% it doubles in 9 years; at 12% it doubles in 6 years. It is accurate for rates between 6% and 10%.

What is the difference between nominal and real returns?

Nominal return is the raw percentage gain on your investment. Real return adjusts for inflation — it shows your actual increase in purchasing power. If your investment returns 8% but inflation is 3%, your real return is approximately 5%. For long-term planning, always consider real returns to understand what your future money can actually buy.

What is dollar-cost averaging?

Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) means investing a fixed amount at regular intervals regardless of market conditions. When prices are low you buy more shares; when prices are high you buy fewer. Over time this reduces the average cost per share and removes the pressure of trying to time the market. The monthly contribution feature of this calculator models DCA.

How do taxes affect investment returns?

Taxes can significantly erode investment returns. In a taxable account, dividends and capital gains are taxed annually. In tax-advantaged accounts (ISA in the UK, 401k/IRA in the US), investments grow tax-free or tax-deferred — significantly improving long-term outcomes. Always use tax-advantaged accounts before taxable ones when possible.