Calculate exactly how your savings grow with compound or simple interest. See monthly projections, total returns, and a year-by-year breakdown — instantly.
7.2%
Avg. High-Yield Rate
10X
Compound Power (30yr)
∞
Free Calculations
💰
Savings Calculator
$
$
%
0.1%5%10%15%20%
YRS
1yr1020304050yr
Final Balance
$16,470
After 10 years at 5.00% compound interest
Total Principal
$10,000
Interest Earned
$6,470
Effective APY
5.09%
Monthly Gain
$54
Principal: $10,000 (61%)Interest: $6,470 (39%)
💡 Maximize Your Returns
To grow wealth faster, consider putting this capital into higher-yield instruments. See our guide on the best investments for 2026 to find options that may outperform standard savings rates.
Year-by-Year Growth
Principal
Interest
Total
Annual Breakdown
Detailed year-by-year schedule showing how your balance builds.
Year
Opening Balance
Interest Earned
Contributions
Closing Balance
∑ How Interest is Calculated
Compound Interest
A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt)
A Final amount
P Principal
r Annual rate (decimal)
n Compounding periods/year
t Time in years
Simple Interest
A = P(1 + rt)
A Final amount
P Principal
r Annual rate (decimal)
t Time in years
Smart Savings Strategies
🔄
Start Compounding Early
The most powerful variable in this calculator is time. Starting 10 years earlier can double your final balance more reliably than any interest rate improvement.
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Compare Savings vs. Investing
A high-yield savings account at 5% is safe but limited. Review where to invest your money for options beyond savings.
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Maximize Compounding Frequency
Daily compounding produces slightly more than monthly, which beats quarterly. When comparing accounts, always look at the APY, not just the APR.
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Automate Monthly Contributions
The monthly savings mode shows why automated contributions accelerate growth dramatically. Even $200/month transforms a modest account over 20 years.
🏠
Real Estate as an Alternative
Real estate investing may offer better risk-adjusted returns than a savings account for longer horizons.
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Emergency Fund First
Before optimizing returns, build 3–6 months of expenses in a liquid, high-yield savings account. This is the foundation of every solid financial plan.
📚 Related Investment Resources
Now that you’ve calculated your savings growth, explore these guides to put your money to work even harder.
Simple interest is calculated only on your original principal — if you deposit $10,000 at 5%, you earn $500 every year regardless of balance. Compound interest is calculated on your growing balance — you earn interest on your interest. Over long periods, compounding creates exponential growth. For serious wealth building, compound interest is the superior instrument.
APY (Annual Percentage Yield) is the effective annual return when compounding is taken into account. A savings account advertised at 5% APR compounding monthly actually produces an APY of 5.116%. When comparing savings products, always compare APY (not APR) for an apples-to-apples comparison. This calculator shows you the effective APY in the results panel.
More frequent compounding means your interest starts earning its own interest sooner. Daily compounding produces marginally more than monthly, which beats quarterly, which beats annual. At 5% for 10 years: daily compounding produces about $16,487 vs. $16,289 for annual compounding on a $10,000 deposit. When choosing a savings account, look for the highest APY with the most frequent compounding period.
For short-term goals and emergency funds, a high-yield savings account is ideal. But for long-term wealth building (10+ years), savings account rates have historically underperformed inflation. Most advisors recommend keeping 3–6 months of expenses in savings and investing the rest in higher-yield instruments. Our guide on wealth management strategies covers how to allocate capital across asset classes.
As of 2026, competitive high-yield savings accounts and money market accounts offer between 4.5%–5.5% APY in the US. Traditional bank savings accounts often pay well under 1%. Online banks and credit unions typically offer the most competitive rates. See our overview of the best investments for 2026 for current opportunities across all asset classes.
First, establish a 3–6 month emergency fund in a liquid savings account. Then eliminate high-interest debt (anything above ~7%). After that, every additional dollar above your emergency fund is better deployed in investments than in savings. Our guide on how much to save for retirement covers target benchmarks by age and income level.
Ready to Put Your Savings to Work Harder?
Discover higher-yield investment opportunities that may significantly outperform a standard savings account over your time horizon.