Project any lump sum or recurring investment at any rate of return.
Investment return calculators are simple to use but easy to misinterpret. The inputs — initial amount, monthly contribution, annual return, time horizon — produce a projected balance that can feel almost impossibly large over long periods. Understanding why those numbers are real (and why they depend entirely on staying invested) is what separates investors who benefit from compounding from those who don't.
The key insight: the majority of long-term investment gains come from growth on growth — not just growth on your original investment. A $10,000 investment at 10% for 30 years grows to $174,494. You contributed $10,000. The remaining $164,494 is entirely compounded returns. The math works — but only if you do not interrupt it.
Historical average annual return: approximately 10% nominal, 7% real (after inflation). This is the long-run average across boom and bust cycles, including the Great Depression, 2008 financial crisis, and COVID crash. Past performance does not guarantee future results, but 7% real is the most widely cited planning assumption for diversified equity portfolios.
Historical average: 7–9% nominal. International diversification reduces portfolio volatility without dramatically changing expected returns. Most target-date funds include 20–40% international exposure.
Historical average: 4–6% nominal. Bonds reduce portfolio volatility but also reduce expected returns. The role of bonds is risk reduction and portfolio stability, not maximum growth.
4–5% APY as of 2024. Risk-free and FDIC-insured. Appropriate for money needed within 3 years.
Historical total returns (appreciation + rental income): 8–12%, but with concentration risk, illiquidity, leverage, and management burden that makes direct comparison to index funds misleading.
Consider three investors, each investing $500/month at a 7% annual return:
Despite only contributing for 10 years, Investor A's money compounds until age 65, producing approximately $1.1 million at retirement.
Three times more contributed than Investor A, but starting 10 years later produces approximately $567,000 — half as much.
This illustration — sometimes called 'the magic of starting early' — demonstrates why even small contributions in your 20s are worth far more than large contributions in your 40s. The best investment decision most young people can make is to start now, with any amount, and not stop.