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FINANCE9 min read

Compound Interest Explained: The Rule of 72 and Why Starting Early Matters

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Aleph Sterling

May 9, 2026 · 9 min read

Albert Einstein allegedly called compound interest "the eighth wonder of the world." Whether he actually said it or not, the math behind it is genuinely remarkable — and most people only discover it too late.

Compound interest is the process by which interest earns interest on itself. It sounds simple. The implications are not. A $10,000 investment at 8% annual return doesn't just earn $800 per year — it earns $800 in year one, $864 in year two, $933 in year three, and so on. The snowball rolls downhill and picks up speed.

But the truly counterintuitive insight isn't the math itself. It's the timing. Starting 10 years earlier can easily double your final balance — without you contributing a single extra dollar.

The Formula (Without the Headache)

The compound interest formula is: A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt)

Where:

  • A = Final amount
  • P = Principal (starting amount)
  • r = Annual interest rate (as a decimal)
  • n = Number of times interest compounds per year
  • t = Time in years

For most long-term investments, compounding monthly vs. annually makes a surprisingly small difference at typical rates. What matters far more is the rate itself and — crucially — the time.

The Rule of 72: Mental Math for Doubling Time

You don't need a calculator to estimate how long it takes your money to double. Just use the Rule of 72:

Years to double = 72 ÷ interest rate

Examples:

  • At 6% return: 72 ÷ 6 = 12 years to double
  • At 8% return: 72 ÷ 8 = 9 years to double
  • At 10% return: 72 ÷ 10 = 7.2 years to double
  • At 12% return: 72 ÷ 12 = 6 years to double

This works in reverse too. Credit card debt at 24% interest? 72 ÷ 24 = 3 years for your debt to double if you're not paying it down. The same math that builds wealth can destroy it.

Why Starting Early Beats Investing More Later

Let's look at two investors, both targeting retirement at age 65. Both earn an 8% average annual return.

Early EmilyLate Larry
Starts investing at age2535
Annual contribution$5,000$5,000
Years investing40 years30 years
Total contributed$200,000$150,000
Balance at 65$1,398,905$611,729

Emily ends up with $787,000 more despite only contributing $50,000 more. The 10 extra years of compounding is worth nearly $800,000. That's not a typo.

The Latte Factor Is Real — But So Is Perspective

You've probably heard the "skip your daily latte and retire rich" argument. Let's put actual numbers to it.

$5/day = $150/month = $1,800/year invested at 8% from age 25 to 65 = approximately $503,000.

That's significant — but not a retirement plan. The point isn't to obsess over coffee. It's that consistency matters more than amount in the early years. Even $50/month started at 25 becomes more valuable than $500/month started at 45.

Compound Interest Working Against You

The same mathematics applies to debt. The average American carries about $6,500 in credit card debt at ~20% APR. Using the Rule of 72: 72 ÷ 20 = 3.6 years for that debt to double if you only make minimum payments.

High-interest debt destroys wealth in the same way compound growth builds it. Before investing, it almost always makes mathematical sense to pay off debt above 7-8% interest rate — because that's a guaranteed 8%+ "return" you can't beat risk-free anywhere else.

How Compounding Frequency Affects Your Return

Most savings accounts compound daily or monthly; most investment calculations assume annual compounding. The difference matters less than most people think at moderate rates:

$10,000 at 8% for 30 years:

  • Annual compounding: $100,627
  • Monthly compounding: $109,357
  • Daily compounding: $110,232

The difference between monthly and daily compounding is less than 1%. Don't let anyone sell you a product based primarily on "daily compounding" as a major advantage.

The Bottom Line

Compound interest is the closest thing to financial magic that actually exists — but it requires two ingredients: a decent return rate and time. You have significant control over the first (through investing in index funds rather than cash savings) and complete control over the second (by starting now, regardless of amount).

The worst thing you can do is wait until you can "afford to invest more." Start with whatever you have today. The math rewards patience and punishes procrastination more than almost any other financial factor.

Calculate It Yourself