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Compound Interest Calculator

Compute compound interest growth with monthly, quarterly or yearly compounding.

Principal
₹1.00 L
₹1,00,000
Interest earned
₹1.22 L
₹1,21,964
Maturity amount
₹2.22 L
₹2,21,964

Formula: A = P × (1 + r/n)n·t, where P = principal, r = annual rate, n = compounding frequency, t = years.

Compound Interest Calculator with flexible compounding

Compound interest is the force behind long-term wealth. Albert Einstein reportedly called it “the most powerful force in the universe” — whether or not he did, the math is striking. This calculator shows the final value of a lump sum invested at a given rate, compounded at your chosen frequency.

The formula

A = P × (1 + r/n)^(n·t)

  • A = final amount
  • P = principal (initial investment)
  • r = annual interest rate (as a decimal)
  • n = number of times per year interest compounds
  • t = number of years

Worked example

₹1,00,000 at 8% for 20 years:

CompoundingFinal amount
Annually (n=1)₹4,66,096
Half-yearly (n=2)₹4,80,102
Quarterly (n=4)₹4,87,544
Monthly (n=12)₹4,92,680
Daily (n=365)₹4,95,216

Daily vs. annual is a 6% difference in total growth — meaningful but not enormous.

Why starting early matters

Two people save ₹1 lakh per year at 10%:

  • Starts at 25, stops at 35 (10 years, ₹10 lakh total contributed)
  • Starts at 35, stops at 65 (30 years, ₹30 lakh total contributed)

By age 65, the person who started early has more money — despite contributing ₹20 lakh less. That’s the compounding curve in action.

When to use this calculator

  • Fixed deposits — see the end value at maturity.
  • Recurring deposits — for a single lump sum only; for monthly contributions use the SIP Calculator.
  • EPF / PPF projections — both use annual compounding.
  • Debt mutual funds — approximate growth at a stable assumed return.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between simple and compound interest?
Simple interest is calculated only on the original principal. Compound interest is calculated on principal plus previously accumulated interest — which means the growth accelerates over time. Most real-world investments (mutual funds, stocks, FDs) use compound interest.
Why does compounding frequency matter?
More frequent compounding means interest is added to principal more often, so subsequent interest calculations are on a larger base. The effect is real but modest: at 10% annual, yearly compounding gives 10% actual, while daily compounding gives ~10.52%. The difference grows with higher rates.
Should I pick monthly or annual compounding for a mutual fund?
Mutual fund NAVs change daily, so conceptually the returns compound continuously. For planning, monthly is a close-enough approximation and matches the frequency of SIP contributions.