Future Value Calculator
Calculate how much your investments will grow over time.
Important Financial Disclaimer
This calculator provides estimates based on standard financial formulas from verified references. Results are for informational and educational purposes only and should not be considered as professional financial, investment, or tax advice.
For important financial decisions such as loans, investments, mortgages, retirement planning, or tax matters, please consult with qualified financial advisors, certified financial planners, or licensed tax professionals who can review your specific situation.
Calculations may not account for all variables specific to your circumstances, local regulations, or current market conditions. Always verify results and consult professionals before making financial commitments.
Not a substitute for professional financial advice
Initial Investment
Growth Rate
Future Value
$300,928
after 15 years
Growth Over Time
Rule of 72: At 7%, your money doubles approximately every 10.3 years
Future Value Calculator Guide
A future value calculator estimates what an amount of money may grow to after compounding. It can include a starting balance, recurring deposits, expected return, compounding frequency, and inflation adjustment.
The output is a projection, not a promise. Investment returns can be volatile, fees reduce growth, and taxes can change the amount you actually keep.
How to Use It
- Enter the money already invested or saved.
- Add any regular deposits you plan to make.
- Use a realistic annual return, preferably lower than a best-case expectation.
- Set the number of years and compounding frequency.
- Review both nominal future value and inflation-adjusted value if available.
Future Value Formula
With a single starting amount, future value is calculated by compounding the present value over time.
Future Value
Where:
- FV= Future value
- PV= Present value or starting balance
- r= Rate per compounding period
- n= Number of compounding periods
What the Estimate Leaves Out
Future value math is clean, but real life is not. Market returns arrive unevenly, savings may pause, fees can compound against you, and inflation changes buying power. For long-term planning, compare several return assumptions instead of relying on one number.
Worked Examples
Starting Balance Only
Problem:
$10,000 grows for 20 years at 6% annually.
Solution Steps:
- 1FV = 10,000 x (1 + 0.06)^20
- 2FV is about $32,071
- 3The investment more than triples before fees and taxes
Result:
Long time horizons make compounding more powerful.
Monthly Contributions
Problem:
$5,000 starts the account, then $300 is added monthly for 15 years.
Solution Steps:
- 1The calculator compounds both the starting balance and each deposit
- 2Later deposits have less time to grow than earlier deposits
- 3Total contributions are $59,000 before investment growth
Result:
Regular deposits can matter as much as the initial balance.
Tips & Best Practices
- ✓Run low, middle, and high return scenarios.
- ✓Include fees when comparing investment products.
- ✓Use inflation-adjusted values for retirement or college planning.
- ✓Do not treat a smooth growth curve as a guarantee.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & References
Last updated: 2026-05-20
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sources
- •Reserve Bank of India (RBI) — Financial regulations, lending rates, and monetary policy guidelines. rbi.org.in
- •Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) — Consumer finance guidelines, mortgage and loan disclosure standards. consumerfinance.gov
- •Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) — Investment and securities market regulations. sebi.gov.in
- •Investopedia — Financial formulas, definitions, and educational content. investopedia.com
For a complete list of all references used across the site, visit our full sources page.
Editorial Note
MyCalcBuddy Editorial Team
This page is maintained as an educational calculator reference.
Formula Source: Fundamentals of Financial Management
by Brigham & Houston