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Question PageFinance

How Much Will My Investment Grow?

Understand how compound interest works, what realistic growth rates look like, and how to project any investment over time with practical examples.

Updated May 7, 2026

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Try It Yourself

Compound Interest Calculator

$
7%
0.5%30%
10 years
1 yr50 yrs

Compounding frequency

Total value after 10 years

$20,096.61

Principal

$10,000

Interest earned

+$10,096.61

Investment growth is driven by three factors: starting amount, rate of return, and time. Compound interest means returns build on previous returns — and that snowball effect becomes dramatically more powerful the longer it runs.

The compound interest formula

Future value = P × (1 + r)^n, where P is your principal, r is the annual return rate, and n is years. A $10,000 investment at 7% annual return: after 10 years = $19,672; after 20 years = $38,697; after 30 years = $76,123. Time in the market matters more than timing the market.

Realistic return rate benchmarks

  • High-yield savings / cash: 4–5% (2024 rates, subject to change)
  • Bonds / fixed income: 3–6% long-term average
  • Diversified stock index fund (e.g. S&P 500): ~10% nominal, ~7% real (inflation-adjusted) long-term average
  • Real estate (appreciation only): 3–5% long-term average
  • Individual stocks: Highly variable; many underperform the index after fees

The cost of waiting

Investing $10,000 today at 7% for 30 years = $76,123. Waiting 10 years to invest the same $10,000 for 20 years = $38,697. That 10-year delay cost $37,426 — roughly 3.7× the original investment.

Regular contributions amplify growth

Adding $500/month to a $10,000 starting investment at 7% for 20 years: final value ~$282,000 vs. $38,697 without contributions. Regular contributions are often more impactful than chasing higher returns.

Frequently Asked Questions

What annual return rate should I use for long-term financial planning?

For a diversified US stock index fund, 7% real (inflation-adjusted) or 10% nominal is the standard long-term historical benchmark. For a mixed portfolio of stocks and bonds, 5–6% nominal is more conservative and appropriate. Never plan around expected returns above 10% — it leads to dangerously optimistic projections and an undersized investment portfolio at retirement.

Does the order of investment returns matter?

Yes — critically, especially near and during retirement. Two portfolios with the same average annual return can produce very different outcomes depending on whether good years or bad years came first. A major downturn early in retirement can permanently impair a portfolio even if it later recovers. This is called sequence-of-returns risk, and it is one of the most important planning considerations for anyone within 10 years of retiring.

Is it too late to start investing at 40 or 50?

No. A 40-year-old investing $500/month at 7% for 25 years will accumulate roughly $380,000. A 50-year-old doing the same for 15 years accumulates around $155,000. Less than starting at 25, but still a meaningful and life-changing sum — and far better than not starting. The best time to invest was years ago; the second best time is today.

Project your investment growth

Use our Stock Return Calculator to model a specific stock purchase, or our Dividend Calculator to project income from dividend-paying investments.

Related tools

  • FIRE Retirement Calculator
  • Inflation Calculator

Before you rely on the numbers

Countfield calculators and guides are planning aids, not personal financial advice. Review the assumptions, compare scenarios, and verify major decisions with the relevant lender, tax professional, or advisor.

MethodologyFinancial disclaimerEditorial standards

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