What is an investment calculator and what does it calculate?+
An investment calculator projects the future value of money based on initial amount, expected annual return, and time horizon. It applies compound interest mathematics to show how much your investment will grow to, how much of the final figure represents actual gains versus what you put in, and the total growth percentage. It is useful for retirement planning, goal setting, and comparing investment scenarios.
What is the lump sum investment formula?+
FV = P x (1 + r/n)^(n x t), where P is the initial investment, r is the annual return rate as a decimal, n is the number of compounding periods per year, and t is the time in years. For example, $50,000 at 9% annually for 15 years with monthly compounding: FV = 50,000 x (1 + 0.09/12)^(12x15) = 50,000 x 3.838 = $191,900.
What annual return rate should I use for stock market investments?+
The S&P 500 has averaged roughly 10-11% annually over the past 50 years before inflation, or about 7% after inflation. For broad equity index funds, 8-10% is a reasonable projection. For a balanced 60/40 stock-bond portfolio, 6-8% is common. For conservative bonds-only portfolios, 3-5%. Always use a more conservative rate for planning so you are not caught short if returns disappoint.
How do I calculate the future value of monthly contributions?+
FV = PMT x ((1 + r_m)^nm - 1) / r_m x (1 + r_m), where PMT is the monthly amount, r_m is the monthly rate (annual rate divided by 12), and nm is the total number of months. For $500/month at 10% for 10 years: r_m = 0.008333, nm = 120, FV = 500 x (2.707 - 1) / 0.008333 x 1.008333 = $102,422.
How many years does it take to double an investment?+
Use the Rule of 72: divide 72 by the annual return rate to estimate the doubling time. At 6%, it takes 72/6 = 12 years. At 10%, it takes 72/10 = 7.2 years. At 12%, about 6 years. This is an approximation that works well for rates between 5% and 15%. For precise calculation, use t = ln(2) / (n x ln(1 + r/n)).
Does compounding frequency make a big difference?+
It makes a meaningful but not dramatic difference. For $100,000 at 10% for 10 years: annual compounding gives $259,374; quarterly gives $268,506; monthly gives $270,704; daily gives $271,791. The jump from annual to monthly compounding adds about $11,330 extra. From monthly to daily adds only $1,087 more. For most practical planning, monthly compounding is accurate enough and matches how most investment accounts operate.
Is lump sum investing or monthly contributions better?+
Studies consistently show that lump sum investing outperforms dollar cost averaging (monthly contributions) about two-thirds of the time, because markets tend to rise over time and the lump sum is compounding for longer. However, monthly contributions are more realistic for most people who earn income periodically and do not have a large sum available upfront. The best strategy is the one you can sustain, and monthly contributions remove the psychological barrier of timing the market.
How does inflation reduce my real investment return?+
Inflation erodes purchasing power over time. The approximate real return is the nominal return minus the inflation rate. At 10% nominal and 3% inflation, the real return is about 7% (more precisely: (1.10/1.03) - 1 = 6.8%). Over 20 years, $100,000 growing at 10% nominally reaches $672,750, but in today's purchasing power at 3% inflation, that is only about $372,000. Always plan using real returns when comparing to today's spending power.
What is the difference between total growth and CAGR?+
Total growth is the percentage gain from the amount invested to the final value: (FV - Invested) / Invested x 100. CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate) is the equivalent annual return: (FV/P)^(1/t) - 1. A $10,000 investment that grows to $22,196 over 10 years has a total growth of 121.96% but a CAGR of 8.0%. CAGR is more useful for comparing investments with different time horizons.
How much should I invest monthly to reach a specific goal?+
Rearrange the monthly contribution formula: PMT = FV x r_m / ((1 + r_m)^nm - 1) / (1 + r_m). To accumulate $500,000 in 20 years at 10% annual return: r_m = 0.008333, nm = 240, PMT = 500,000 x 0.008333 / (7.328 - 1) / 1.008333 = approximately $872 per month. You can also use the Reverse SIP tab on our SIP Calculator for this type of back-calculation.
Are the investment returns shown in this calculator guaranteed?+
No. The calculator assumes a constant annual return rate, which is a projection, not a guarantee. Actual stock and fund returns fluctuate year to year and can be negative in some years. Fixed-income products like bank fixed deposits and government bonds have guaranteed returns, so they are good candidates for exact calculations. For equity investments, the tool shows what your investment would grow to if returns were consistent, not what they will actually be.