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Compound Interest Calculator

Gamitin ang Compound Interest Calculator na ito para makuha ang mabilis at tumpak na resulta.

Paano gamitin ang calculator na ito

  1. Ilagay ang Principal (₱)
  2. Ilagay ang Annual Rate (%)
  3. Ilagay ang Years
  4. Ilagay ang Compounding
  5. I-click ang Kalkulahin na buton
  6. Basahin ang resultang ipinapakita sa ibaba ng calculator

The Compound Interest Formula Explained

Compound interest is interest calculated on both the initial principal and all previously accumulated interest. The formula is:

A = P × (1 + r/n)^(n×t)

Where:

Worked example: ₱560,000 invested at 7% annually for 20 years, compounded monthly:
A = 10,000 × (1 + 0.07/12)^(12×20) = 10,000 × (1.005833)^240 = ₱2,243,584

Compare to simple interest over the same period: ₱560,000 + (₱560,000 × 0.07 × 20) = ₱1,344,000. Compounding adds an extra ₱899,584 in this example.

Compounding Frequency: Does It Matter?

The more frequently interest compounds, the more you earn — but the differences diminish at higher frequencies:

Compounding Frequency₱560,000 at 8% for 10 yearsTotal Interest Earned
Annually (n=1)₱1,208,984₱648,984
Quarterly (n=4)₱1,236,480₱676,480
Monthly (n=12)₱1,242,976₱682,976
Weekly (n=52)₱1,244,600₱684,600
Daily (n=365)₱1,246,168₱686,168
Continuous₱1,246,280₱686,280

The difference between monthly and daily compounding is less than ₱3,360 on a ₱560,000 investment over 10 years. The frequency matters far less than the interest rate and the time horizon.

Continuous compounding uses the formula A = P × e^(r×t), where e ≈ 2.71828. This is the theoretical maximum and is used in financial modeling, though no real product compounds continuously.

The Power of Starting Early: Time vs. Amount

Time is the single most powerful variable in compound interest. This example illustrates why starting early matters more than investing more:

Investor A (Early)Investor B (Late)
Start investing age2535
Stop investing age3565
Years of contribution10 years30 years
Annual contribution₱280,000/year₱280,000/year
Total contributed₱2,800,000₱8,400,000
Value at age 65 (7% return)₱33,715,920₱30,281,496

Investor A contributed three times less money but ends up with ₱3,416,000 more — purely because of the extra 10 years of compounding. This is the most important financial lesson of compounding: time in the market beats amount invested.

The Rule of 72 and Other Mental Math Shortcuts

The Rule of 72 estimates how long it takes to double your money: divide 72 by the annual interest rate.

The Rule of 114 estimates triple: 114 / rate = years to triple.
The Rule of 144 estimates quadruple: 144 / rate = years to quadruple.

Inflation version: The Rule of 72 works in reverse too. At 3% inflation, your purchasing power halves in 72 / 3 = 24 years. This is why leaving money in a 0.5% savings account during a 3% inflation environment is effectively losing 2.5% purchasing power per year.

Compound Interest in Real Life: Savings, Loans, and Inflation

Compounding works for you in savings accounts and investments — and against you in debt. Understanding both sides is critical:

Savings and investments (compounding works FOR you):

Debt (compounding works AGAINST you):

Compound Interest vs Simple Interest: Key Differences

Simple interest is calculated only on the original principal: Interest = P × r × t

Compound interest is calculated on the principal plus accumulated interest each period.

Over short periods, the difference is small. Over long periods, it is dramatic:

Years₱560,000 at 7% Simple₱560,000 at 7% Compound (annual)Difference
5₱756,000₱785,456₱29,456
10₱952,000₱1,101,632₱149,632
20₱1,344,000₱2,167,032₱823,032
30₱1,736,000₱4,262,888₱2,526,888
40₱2,128,000₱8,385,720₱6,257,720

Simple interest is used for short-term loans and some bonds. Compound interest governs savings accounts, mortgages, credit cards, and most investment vehicles.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between simple and compound interest?

Simple interest is calculated only on the original principal. Compound interest is calculated on the principal plus all previously earned interest. Over time, compound interest grows exponentially while simple interest grows linearly.

How often should interest compound for best results?

More frequent compounding earns slightly more. Daily compounding yields marginally more than monthly, which yields more than annually. However, the differences are small — going from annual to daily compounding on ₱560,000 at 8% for 10 years adds only about ₱37,184 extra. The interest rate and time horizon matter far more.

What is the Rule of 72?

Divide 72 by the annual interest rate to estimate how many years it takes to double your money. At 6% annual return, your money doubles in approximately 12 years. At 9%, it doubles in about 8 years.

What is a good interest rate for savings?

As of 2024–2025, high-yield savings accounts offer 4.5–5.5% APY. Traditional bank savings accounts offer 0.01–0.5%. For long-term growth, broad market index funds have historically returned about 7% after inflation over multi-decade periods.

How does compound interest affect loans and credit cards?

Compound interest works against you with debt. A credit card balance at 22% APR compounds monthly, meaning unpaid interest gets added to your principal, which then generates more interest. A ₱280,000 credit card balance with only minimum payments can take over 20 years to pay off and cost thousands in extra interest.

What is the formula for continuous compounding?

A = P × e^(rt), where e ≈ 2.71828, r is the annual interest rate, and t is time in years. For example, ₱560,000 at 5% continuously compounded for 10 years: A = 10,000 × e^(0.05×10) = 10,000 × 1.6487 = ₱923,272.

How much do I need to save to become a millionaire?

At 7% annual return: saving ₱28,000/month for 30 years accumulates to ~₱31,752,000. Saving ₱56,000/month for 30 years reaches ~₱56.13 million. The faster path is starting early — ₱11,200/month starting at 22 can reach ₱56 million by age 65 at 7% returns.

Does compound interest apply to retirement accounts like 401(k) and IRA?

Yes. Funds within 401(k), IRA, and similar accounts grow through compound returns on investments (stocks, bonds, funds). The tax-deferred or tax-free nature of these accounts amplifies compounding further by preventing annual tax drag on gains.

"Compound interest is one of the most powerful tools in investing. By reinvesting your earnings, your investment can grow exponentially over time — a process that benefits most from starting early and contributing consistently."

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Compound Interest — Investor.gov

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Huling na-update: March 2026