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Savings Calculator

See how your savings grow. Enter a starting balance, a monthly deposit, your interest rate, and how long you'll save — and get your future balance, the interest you'll earn, and a year-by-year breakdown.

Short answer

Your savings grow by compound interest — interest earned on both your balance and the interest already added. $10,000 plus $200/month at 5% grows to about $63,000 in 15 years, and roughly a third of that is interest. Time and steady deposits matter more than the exact rate.

$
$

Future balance

$47,527

Total contributions
$34,000
Interest earned
$13,527

28% of your final balance is interest.

YearContributionsInterestBalance
1$12,400$567$12,967
2$14,800$1,287$16,087
3$17,200$2,165$19,365
4$19,600$3,212$22,812
5$22,000$4,435$26,435
6$24,400$5,843$30,243
7$26,800$7,446$34,246
8$29,200$9,254$38,454
9$31,600$11,277$42,877
10$34,000$13,527$47,527

Savings interest by starting amount

Growth of $10,000 + $200/mo at 5% (compounded monthly)

AfterYou contributeInterest earnedBalance
10 years$34,000$13,527$47,527
20 years$58,000$51,333$109,333
30 years$82,000$129,129$211,129

Pre-tax growth using monthly compounding. Interest earned is the balance minus everything you put in — it overtakes contributions the longer you save.

How much will my savings grow?

Four things drive the answer: your starting balance, how much you add each month, the interest rate, and how long you save. Because interest compounds, the balance grows faster the longer you leave it — and consistent monthly deposits do a surprising amount of the work. Enter your own numbers to see the future value and a full year-by-year table.

How we calculate this

This calculator grows your balance the way a savings account does:

  1. Compounding. each period the balance earns interest at rate ÷ periods-per-year, and that interest is added back so it compounds. A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt).
  2. Contributions. your monthly deposit is added every period and grows from the moment it lands — the future value of a series of deposits, added to the growth of your starting balance.
  3. Interest vs contributions. total interest = final balance − everything you deposited (starting balance plus all contributions), so you can see how much your money earned on its own.

Assumptions

  • A constant rate for the whole term — real savings rates change.
  • Pre-tax — interest in a taxable account is taxed as income the year you earn it.
  • Contributions are made monthly and stay the same.

Last reviewed: July 17, 2026

Frequently asked questions

How is compound interest calculated?+

Compound interest uses A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt): your principal P grows by the annual rate r, compounded n times a year, over t years. Because each period's interest is added to the balance, the next period earns interest on that interest too. This calculator also adds the growth of any regular monthly deposits, then shows the total interest earned separately from what you put in.

What's the difference between APY and interest rate?+

The interest rate is the base annual rate; APY (annual percentage yield) folds in the effect of compounding, so it's the rate you actually earn over a year. A 5% rate compounded monthly is about a 5.12% APY. If your bank quotes an APY, enter it with yearly compounding to match; if it quotes a rate, choose how often it compounds.

How much will my savings grow?+

It depends on four things: your starting balance, how much you add each month, the interest rate, and how long you leave it. Time and regular contributions usually matter more than the rate — $200 a month at 5% for 30 years grows to roughly $166,000, and about half of that is interest. Enter your own numbers above to see your result and a year-by-year table.

Does compounding frequency really matter?+

A little. $10,000 at 5% for 10 years grows to about $16,289 compounded yearly, $16,470 compounded monthly, and $16,487 compounded daily. Daily beats yearly, but the gap is small compared to the rate itself and how long you save. This tool lets you switch the frequency to see the exact difference.

Is the interest I earn taxable?+

In a regular (taxable) savings account, interest is generally taxed as ordinary income in the year you earn it, which lowers your effective return. Tax-advantaged accounts (like a Roth IRA or 401(k)) change that. This calculator shows pre-tax growth — check your own tax situation for the after-tax figure.

How do regular monthly deposits change the result?+

Every deposit you add starts compounding from the moment it lands, so consistent contributions have an outsized effect over time. The calculator treats your monthly deposit as recurring and shows total contributions and total interest separately, so you can see exactly how much of your final balance you saved versus earned.

This tool shows pre-tax estimated growth and assumes a constant rate; real savings rates change and interest in a taxable account is taxed as income. For information, not financial advice.