Compound interest has been called the eighth wonder of the world — a quote often attributed to Albert Einstein, though its true origin is debated. Regardless of who said it, the principle is undeniable: earning interest on your interest creates exponential growth that, over decades, transforms modest savings into substantial wealth.
Simple vs. Compound Interest
Simple interest pays a fixed percentage of the original principal each period. If you invest $10,000 at 7% simple interest for 30 years, you earn $700 per year, totaling $31,000. Compound interest, by contrast, adds each period's earnings back to the balance so that future interest is calculated on a larger base. The same $10,000 at 7% compounded annually for 30 years grows to approximately $76,123 — more than double the simple-interest result. The difference is entirely due to earning interest on previously earned interest.
How Compounding Frequency Affects Returns
The more frequently interest compounds, the faster your money grows. Monthly compounding earns slightly more than quarterly, which earns more than semi-annual, which earns more than annual. At 6% nominal, annual compounding yields an effective rate of 6.00%, while monthly compounding yields 6.17%. Over 30 years on $100,000, this seemingly small difference adds up to thousands of dollars. This is why the effective annual rate (EAR) — not the nominal rate — is the true measure of return.
The Magic of Regular Contributions
Lump-sum growth is powerful, but adding periodic contributions supercharges it. Contributing $200 per month at 7% annual return for 30 years builds over $227,000 — yet your total contributions are only $72,000. The remaining $155,000+ is pure compound growth. This is the mechanism behind dollar-cost averaging: regular, disciplined investing harnesses compounding regardless of short-term market fluctuations.
Time Is Your Greatest Asset
Consider two investors: one starts at age 25 and invests $200/month for 10 years (total: $24,000), then stops. The other starts at age 35 and invests $200/month for 30 years (total: $72,000). At 7% annual return, the early starter ends up with more money at age 65 despite investing three times less. This is the most counterintuitive and powerful lesson of compound interest: starting early matters more than investing more.
Dividend Reinvestment
When you own stocks or funds that pay dividends, reinvesting those dividends — buying more shares instead of taking cash — adds another compounding layer. Historical data from the S&P 500 shows that roughly 80% of long-term total returns come from reinvested dividends and their subsequent growth. Our simulator lets you model this by adding a dividend yield and toggling reinvestment on or off.
Inflation: The Silent Thief
A nominal balance of $500,000 in 30 years will not buy what $500,000 buys today. At 3% average inflation, purchasing power halves roughly every 24 years. If your investment earns 7% nominally but inflation runs at 3%, your real return is approximately 3.9%. Our inflation-adjustment feature shows this reality so you can set savings targets based on future purchasing power, not today's dollars.
The Rule of 72
A quick mental shortcut: divide 72 by your annual return percentage to estimate how many years it takes to double your money. At 6%, doubling takes about 12 years. At 8%, about 9 years. At 12%, about 6 years. The Rule of 72 is an approximation — exact doubling time uses logarithms — but it is remarkably accurate for rates between 2% and 15%, making it a useful tool for quick mental math.