Interest Rate Calculator

Calculate simple interest, compound interest, effective annual rate (EAR), APY, and total growth for any financial scenario — instantly and for free.

$
The initial amount of money deposited or borrowed
%
Annual interest rate (nominal / stated rate)
yr
Duration in years (e.g. 0.5 = 6 months, 1.25 = 15 months)

Quick Summary

  • Calculates both simple and compound interest, plus effective annual rate (EAR) and APY in a single tool.
  • Supports all standard compounding frequencies: daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, and annually.
  • Displays a full year-by-year growth schedule so you can see how your money grows over time.
  • Accepts principal, rate, time, and compounding frequency — results update instantly on Calculate.
  • Useful for savings accounts, CDs, loans, mortgages, bonds, and investment comparisons.
  • Completely free, no sign-up required, and no data is stored or transmitted.

How to Use the Interest Rate Calculator

Select either Simple Interest or Compound Interest using the tab at the top of the calculator. Simple interest is best for short-term loans, basic bonds, and treasury bills. Compound interest covers savings accounts, CDs, investment accounts, mortgages, and virtually every modern financial product.

Enter your principal, your annual interest rate, and your time period. For compound calculations, also choose your compounding frequency — monthly is the default and covers most savings accounts and personal loans. If you make regular monthly contributions, enter that amount too to see how recurring deposits accelerate growth.

What Is Simple Interest?

Simple interest is the most transparent form of interest calculation. It charges (or earns) interest only on the original principal, never on accumulated interest. The formula is I = P × r × t, where P is the principal, r is the annual rate as a decimal, and t is time in years.

Simple interest appears most often in car loans structured as "add-on" loans, short-term personal loans, treasury bills, and some government bonds. It is also the standard for calculating interest owed on overdue invoices in commercial contracts. Because interest does not compound on itself, the total cost is always predictable and linear.

What Is Compound Interest — and Why Does It Matter?

Compound interest calculates interest on both the original principal and all previously accumulated interest. Albert Einstein reportedly called it the eighth wonder of the world — the attribution may be apocryphal, but the mathematics is undeniable. The difference between simple and compound interest becomes starkly visible over long horizons.

Maria invests $15,000 at 7% for 30 years. With simple interest, she earns $31,500 — a final balance of $46,500. With annual compounding, her balance grows to approximately $114,293. Monthly compounding pushes that figure to roughly $117,978. The extra $71,793 comes entirely from interest earning interest, with no additional effort on Maria's part.

The Compound Interest Formula

The standard formula for compound interest is:

A = P × (1 + r ÷ n)n × t

Where A is the final amount, P is the principal, r is the annual nominal rate (as a decimal), n is the number of compounding periods per year, and t is the time in years. The interest earned is simply A − P.

When regular contributions are added each month, the calculator uses the Future Value of Annuity formula alongside the principal formula to compute the total accumulated value accurately.

Understanding Effective Annual Rate (EAR) and APY

The Effective Annual Rate — also called Annual Percentage Yield (APY) in the United States — reveals the true annual return after accounting for compounding within the year. It is calculated as:

EAR = (1 + r ÷ n)n − 1

A savings account with a 5% nominal rate compounded monthly has an EAR of approximately 5.116%. A CD compounding daily at 5% yields an EAR of approximately 5.127%. These differences seem small, but on a $500,000 portfolio, the gap between monthly and daily compounding amounts to nearly $550 per year — simply from how often interest is applied.

The U.S. Truth in Savings Act requires financial institutions to disclose APY on all deposit products. When comparing bank accounts, always compare APYs — not the nominal rate. Two accounts can quote the same nominal rate but different APYs because of different compounding frequencies.

How Compounding Frequency Affects Growth

More frequent compounding produces higher returns, though the marginal gains diminish as frequency increases. Here is what $10,000 at 6% grows to over 10 years under different compounding schedules:

  • Annually: $17,908.48 — EAR: 6.000%
  • Semi-annually: $18,061.11 — EAR: 6.090%
  • Quarterly: $18,140.18 — EAR: 6.136%
  • Monthly: $18,193.97 — EAR: 6.168%
  • Daily: $18,220.55 — EAR: 6.183%

The difference between annual and daily compounding is $312 over 10 years on a $10,000 deposit. Meaningful — but the rate itself remains the dominant variable. A 6% annually compounded account vastly outperforms a 5% daily compounded account.

The Power of Regular Contributions

Adding a regular monthly contribution transforms the trajectory entirely. James deposits $10,000 at 6% monthly compounding for 20 years. Without any further contributions, his final balance is $33,102. If he adds just $200 per month, the total climbs to approximately $125,355 — of which $48,000 came from his contributions and $34,253 from compound interest on those contributions alone.

This is why financial advisors consistently emphasise automating a fixed monthly transfer to savings or investment accounts. The compounding engine works whether you think about it or not.

When to Use Simple vs. Compound Interest

Use simple interest when calculating interest on short-term instruments (under one year), treasury bills, commercial paper, or when comparing a loan product that explicitly states it uses simple interest. Many payday loans and some personal loans are structured this way.

Use compound interest for virtually everything else: savings accounts, money market accounts, CDs, investment portfolios, mortgages, student loans, credit cards, and business loans. If a financial product has a term exceeding one year and does not explicitly state simple interest, assume it compounds.

Common Mistakes When Comparing Interest Rates

The most frequent error is comparing a nominal rate from one product against an APY from another. A bank advertising "6% APY" and a competitor advertising "6% interest" are not offering the same product. The first is showing you the effective rate; the second is showing the nominal rate — which computes to a higher effective return.

A second mistake is ignoring fees. An account with a 4.5% APY but a $25 monthly maintenance fee may deliver less net return than an account with a 4.0% APY and no fees, depending on the balance. This calculator handles the pure interest mathematics; always factor in fees separately.

Disclaimer

This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results assume a fixed interest rate, uniform compounding periods, and no fees, taxes, or penalties. Real-world products vary. Consult a qualified financial adviser before making any investment or borrowing decision.

Frequently Asked Questions

Conclusion

Whether you are comparing savings accounts, evaluating a CD offer, or working out the true cost of a loan, knowing the difference between nominal and effective rates — and how compounding frequency shifts outcomes — puts you firmly in control of your financial decisions.

Bookmark this page and use it whenever a bank quotes you a rate, when you are planning a savings goal, or when you want to see how an extra monthly contribution changes your long-term balance.

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