Advertisement — 728×90
Wealth Building Tool

Wealth Builder Calculator

See the hockey-stick power of compound interest. Inflation-adjusted, with the real cost of waiting.

Investment Details
$
%
yrs
mo

Regular Contributions optional
Select the type of regular cash flow to include

Inflation Adjustment
Show future balance in today's purchasing power (3% inflation)

How Compound Interest Works

Compound interest means you earn interest on both your original deposit and all the interest you've already earned. Over time this creates exponential growth — the "hockey stick" curve you see in this calculator. The earlier you start, the more powerful it becomes.

What's Inflation Adjustment?

A million dollars in 30 years won't buy what a million dollars buys today. With 3% annual inflation, $1,000,000 in 30 years has the purchasing power of about $412,000 today. Toggling inflation adjustment shows your future balance in today's dollars so you can plan realistically.

HYSA vs Brokerage — Which is Right for Me?

Use a High-Yield Savings Account for money you'll need in 1–5 years — it's safe, liquid, and currently paying 4–5% APY. Use a brokerage account (index funds or robo-advisor) for money you won't touch for 5+ years — historically returns 7–10% annually but comes with market ups and downs.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much should I invest each month?

A common starting point is 15% of your gross income. But any amount beats zero — even $50/month at 8% grows to over $75,000 in 30 years. Use this calculator to find the monthly contribution that hits your target balance within your timeline.

What investment return rate should I use?

For long-term planning, 7% is a widely used conservative estimate (roughly the S&P 500's historical return after inflation). For short-term goals in a savings account, 4–5% reflects current HYSA rates. Adjust based on where your money will actually be invested.

How does compounding frequency affect my returns?

More frequent compounding means slightly higher returns. Daily compounding beats annual compounding — but the difference is small at moderate rates. At 7% annual rate, daily compounding returns about 7.25% versus exactly 7% with annual compounding. The bigger factor is always your contribution amount and time horizon.