Investment Calculator
Project the future value of a lump sum or monthly contributions at any return rate and time horizon.
💰 What is an Investment Calculator?
An investment calculator projects how much money an investment will grow to over a specified period given an assumed annual return rate. It answers the most practical question in personal finance: "If I invest this amount today (or each month), how much will I have in X years?" The tool applies compound interest mathematics to translate today's dollars into tomorrow's wealth, showing you future value, total gains, and growth percentage in seconds.
Investment calculators serve several real-world purposes. Retirement planning is the most common: you want to know if saving a certain monthly amount from age 30 to 65 will produce enough to live on. Goal-based planning is another major use: you have a target number (a home down payment, a college fund, a travel fund) and need to know what monthly contribution or lump sum today gets you there. Scenario comparison is a third: what happens to the outcome if you invest for 10 years instead of 15, or if returns average 8% instead of 10%?
This calculator handles two distinct scenarios. The Lump Sum mode models a single investment made today that grows with compound interest over time. You choose the compounding frequency (annual, quarterly, monthly, or daily) to match your specific instrument. A bank fixed deposit, for instance, typically compounds quarterly, while a brokerage account compounds daily or continuously. The Monthly Contributions mode models a regular periodic investment, such as a monthly SIP in a mutual fund or automatic 401(k) contribution. It also accepts an optional starting amount for investors who have existing savings and want to see the combined result of what they already have plus future contributions.
Understanding the output matters as much as computing it. The future value is not guaranteed; it is a projection based on assumed constant returns. Real market returns fluctuate year to year. The growth percentage shows total return relative to the amount invested, not the annualized return. For a 20-year investment that grows from $100,000 to $672,750, the total growth is 572.75% but the CAGR is only 10% annually. Both numbers are correct and useful for different comparisons.
📐 Formula
📖 How to Use This Calculator
Steps to Calculate Investment Growth
💡 Example Calculations
Example 1 - Lump Sum Investment at 8% for 10 Years
$10,000 invested at 8% annual return, monthly compounding, for 10 years
Example 2 - Monthly Contributions Over 20 Years
$1,000/month at 10% annual return for 20 years (no starting amount)
Example 3 - Starting Amount Plus Monthly Contributions
$20,000 starting amount + $500/month at 8% for 15 years
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
🔗 Related Calculators
What is an investment calculator and how does it work?
An investment calculator projects how much your money will grow over time based on the amount invested, expected annual return rate, and time period. It uses compound interest formulas to show future value, total gains, and growth percentage. You enter inputs and the calculator does the math instantly.
What is the formula for lump sum investment growth?
FV = P x (1 + r/n)^(n x t), where P is principal, r is the annual rate as a decimal, n is compounding periods per year, and t is years. For example, $10,000 at 8% for 10 years with monthly compounding gives $10,000 x (1 + 0.08/12)^120 = approximately $22,196.
How is monthly contribution growth calculated?
FV = PMT x ((1 + r_m)^nm - 1) / r_m x (1 + r_m), where PMT is the monthly payment, r_m is the monthly rate (annual rate / 12), and nm is total months. If you also have a starting amount, its compound growth is added to this figure.
What annual return rate should I use?
Common benchmarks: 6-8% for a balanced stock and bond portfolio, 10-12% for a 100% equity index fund historically, 5-7% for bonds only, and 1-3% for savings accounts or money market funds. Always use a conservative estimate when planning long-term goals.
What compounding frequency should I choose?
Monthly compounding is the most realistic for most investments such as mutual funds, index funds, and savings accounts. Annual compounding slightly understates real returns. The difference between monthly and daily compounding is small. For fixed deposits, use the frequency your bank specifies.
What is the Rule of 72 for doubling an investment?
The Rule of 72 is a quick mental estimate: divide 72 by the annual return rate to find the approximate years to double your investment. At 8%, 72 / 8 = 9 years. At 12%, 72 / 12 = 6 years. This works well for rates between 5% and 15% and gives a fast sanity check without a calculator.
Is lump sum or monthly investing better?
In a market that rises consistently, a lump sum invested at the start outperforms monthly contributions because the full amount compounds for the entire period. In volatile or sideways markets, monthly contributions benefit from dollar cost averaging, buying more units when prices dip. For most salaried investors who receive income periodically, monthly contributions are more practical regardless.
How does inflation affect my real investment return?
Inflation reduces the real purchasing power of your returns. To find the approximate real return, subtract the inflation rate from the nominal return. If your investment grows at 8% annually and inflation is 3%, your real return is about 5%. Over 20 years, a 5% real return on $10,000 gives $26,533 in today's purchasing power, not the $46,610 the nominal 8% would suggest.
What is the difference between nominal and real returns?
Nominal return is the raw percentage gain before adjusting for inflation. Real return = ((1 + nominal) / (1 + inflation)) - 1. If a fund returns 10% nominally and inflation is 4%, the real return is (1.10 / 1.04) - 1 = 5.77%. The investment calculator shows nominal returns; adjust manually for inflation when comparing to future purchasing power.
How much should I invest monthly to reach a financial goal?
Use the reverse SIP or future value formula: PMT = FV x r_m / ((1 + r_m)^n - 1) / (1 + r_m). To reach $500,000 in 20 years at 10% annual return: r_m = 0.10/12 = 0.008333, n = 240, PMT = 500,000 x 0.008333 / (7.328 - 1) / 1.008333 = approximately $872 per month.
What is a realistic long-term investment return?
Long-term equity index fund returns (such as S&P 500) have averaged 9-11% annually over the past 50 years before inflation. After inflation, real returns average 6-7%. Bond portfolios typically return 3-5% nominally. A 60/40 stock-bond portfolio historically averages 7-9% nominal. These are averages and include years with significant losses.