This page is educational. It is not investment, tax, or financial advice, and it does not guarantee any return.
Why recurring deposits change the result
Compound interest is often explained with a single starting amount, but real saving usually happens through repeated deposits. Each monthly contribution adds new principal, and older contributions have more time to grow.
Starting balance
The money already invested or saved before the monthly plan begins.
Total contributions
The sum of recurring deposits. This helps separate what you added from what grew.
Growth share
The portion of the final value created by compounding rather than direct deposits.
What to compare in a compound interest estimate
1. Keep the time period fixed
Compare monthly contributions over the same number of years so the scenarios are easy to read.
2. Change one input at a time
Adjust contribution amount, annual return, or years separately so you know what caused the result to change.
3. Review total deposits
A higher ending balance is not automatically better if it mostly comes from much larger contributions.
4. Treat return as an assumption
Actual market returns vary. Use conservative, middle, and optimistic assumptions instead of one perfect number.
Try several contribution scenarios
Run the same estimate with $50, $100, $250, and $500 monthly contributions. The comparison makes the tradeoff between savings rate, time, and assumed return much easier to see.
Calculate compound growth常见问题
Do monthly contributions compound immediately?
They begin compounding after they are added. Contributions made earlier have more time to grow than later contributions.
Should I use monthly or annual compounding?
Use the compounding frequency that best matches the account or investment estimate. Monthly compounding is common for simple planning comparisons.
Why compare total contributions?
It shows how much of the ending value came from your deposits versus estimated growth.