Investment Details
Interest Rate
Summary
Growth Over Time
Year-by-Year Breakdown
| Year | Starting Balance | Contributions | Cumulative Contributions | Interest | Ending Balance |
|---|
See how your money grows over time with the power of compound interest
| Year | Starting Balance | Contributions | Cumulative Contributions | Interest | Ending Balance |
|---|
Compound interest means you earn interest on your interest — not just on the money you originally invested. Over three years, the effect is barely noticeable. Over thirty years, it's transformative. A single $10,000 investment at 7% annual return grows to about $81,000 in 30 years without adding another dollar. That's the power of compounding: the growth curve is exponential, not linear, and time is the variable that matters most.
But for most people, monthly contributions matter even more than the initial lump sum. Contributing $500 per month for 30 years at 7% produces roughly $610,000 — of which $180,000 is your contributions and $430,000 is pure interest. The earlier you start contributing, the more time each dollar has to compound. A dollar invested at 25 is worth significantly more at retirement than the same dollar invested at 35.
Banks and brokers advertise different compounding frequencies — daily, monthly, quarterly, annually. On a $10,000 investment at 7% over 30 years, the difference between annual and monthly compounding is about $5,000 ($76,000 vs. $81,000). The reason: more frequent compounding means interest gets added to the principal sooner, so it starts earning its own interest earlier. The jump from annual to monthly is meaningful, but going from monthly to daily adds only about $500 — diminishing returns as the interval gets shorter.
Enable "Show crossover" on the chart to see the year when your cumulative interest earned surpasses your cumulative contributions. Before this point, most of your balance is money you put in. After it, most of your balance is money your money made for you. This is the moment compounding truly takes over — and reaching it sooner is the strongest argument for starting early. With the default settings, the crossover happens around year 17. Try adjusting the time horizon to see how it shifts — at 20 years it may not happen at all, but at 30 years it arrives with room to spare.
No investment earns exactly the same return every year. The variance setting (e.g., 7% ± 2%) shows you the range of outcomes — what your portfolio might look like if returns average 5% (pessimistic) versus 9% (optimistic). Over short periods the bands are narrow, but over 20-30 years they diverge dramatically. This is the real planning value: not the single number, but the range. If even the low estimate meets your goal, you're in a strong position.
Here's what the year-by-year breakdown shows:
To see how your contributions should be split across 401(k), HSA, and IRA for tax efficiency, try the Investment Optimizer. To map how money flows from your paycheck to your investment accounts each month, use the Money Flow Analyzer.