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Compound Interest Mortgage Calculator Debt Snowball

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Compound Interest Calculator

The Power of Quiet Compounding

Wealth isn’t built in a day; it’s built in the margins of decades. This engine separates your hard work from the market’s heavy lifting. Visualize the exact moment your portfolio momentum starts working harder than you do—a moment we call the “Momentum Flip.”
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Important Warning: If you are currently battling high-interest debt, compound interest is your enemy, not your friend. Do not begin an aggressive investment plan yet. Go to the Debt Snowball Calculator to clear the runway first.

5 Years
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10 Years
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20 Years
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Retire Age
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Growth trajectory

Financial Momentum

Critical tipping points where your money starts doing the heavy lifting.

The First $100k is the Hardest

Watch how the time between each $100k milestone shrinks as compound interest takes over.

Wealth Legacy

Legacy @ 90

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Assets projected at age 90. Optimize your wealth transfer today.

Yearly Breakdown

Age Start Contribution Withdrawal Growth End
Frequently Asked Questions

Simple interest is calculated only on the principal amount (the original deposit). Compound interest is calculated on the principal plus the accumulated interest from previous periods. This creates an exponential growth curve over time. This tool visualizes that curve, differentiating between the "Total Contributions" (money you put in) and the "Hypothetical Growth" (interest earned on interest).

No. The growth rate input into this calculator is a variable for estimation purposes only. Actual market returns fluctuate based on economic conditions, asset allocation, and inflation. This tool projects a constant rate of return to illustrate the mathematical power of time and consistency, but it does not predict future market performance or guarantee a specific profit.

The frequency at which funds are added and compounded impacts the final total. This calculator assumes monthly contributions to reflect standard investing behavior (e.g., monthly 401k or IRA deposits). Contributing smaller amounts frequently often yields better long-term results than larger, infrequent lump sums due to the mechanics of compounding—the sooner the money is invested, the longer it has to generate returns on itself.