A breakdown of the math behind compound interest and what each result means.
1. The Compound Interest Formula
The core equation is:
A = P × (1 + r)t
Where P is your principal, r is the annual interest rate (as a decimal), and t is the number of years. Each year, interest is added to your balance — and the next year's interest is calculated on the new, larger balance. That's compounding. This calculator assumes annual compounding (interest credited once a year).
2. Inflation Adjustment
Money in 5 years won't have the same purchasing power as today. Real value discounts the maturity by inflation:
Real Value = Post-Tax Maturity ÷ (1 + inflation)t
The "real return rate" is what you actually earn after inflation:
Real Return = (1 + nominal) ÷ (1 + inflation) − 1
3. Tax on Gains
This calculator applies a flat 12.5% LTCG rate to the interest earned. This aligns with India's long-term capital gains tax on equity and equity-oriented instruments:
Tax = Interest × 12.5%
For other instruments (FDs, RDs, debt funds post-2023), interest is taxed at your income-tax slab rate, which is typically higher. The 12.5% used here is a conservative estimate for long-term investors.
4. Doubling Time
The exact time for your money to double, using logarithms:
Doubling Time = ln(2) ÷ ln(1 + r)
At 12% annual return, money doubles in about 6.12 years.
Caveats
All projections assume a constant interest rate over the entire tenure. Real-world rates change — FD renewals reset to current rates, MF returns vary year to year. The 12.5% tax assumption is a simplification; actual tax may differ based on instrument type, holding period, and your income slab.