Quick Answer
Compound interest is interest calculated on both the principal AND the accumulated interest from previous periods. In other words, you earn interest on your interest. Over time, this creates exponential growth — either working for you (savings/investments) or against you (debt).
| Scenario | 10 Years | 20 Years | 30 Years |
|---|---|---|---|
| $10K at 4.5% APY (HYSA) | $15,530 | $24,117 | $37,453 |
| $500/mo at 4.5% APY | $76,408 | $191,473 | $381,846 |
| $500/mo at 7% (investing) | $86,919 | $261,220 | $606,438 |
How does compound interest work?
Compound interest calculates interest on both the original principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. For example, $1,000 at 10% annual compound interest: Year 1 earns $100 (total $1,100). Year 2 earns $110 (10% of $1,100, total $1,210). Year 3 earns $121 (10% of $1,210, total $1,331). The interest earned grows each year because you're earning interest on a larger base.
What is the best example of compound interest?
The best example of compound interest working for you is long-term investing. $10,000 invested at 7% annual return (historical stock market average) grows to $76,123 in 30 years — without adding a single dollar. The best example working against you is credit card debt: $5,000 at 24% APR with minimum payments takes 8 years to pay off and costs $4,000+ in interest.
How often does compound interest compound?
It depends on the account or loan. High-yield savings accounts typically compound daily. CDs may compound daily or monthly. Bonds typically pay simple interest. Credit cards compound daily. More frequent compounding means slightly more interest earned (or owed). Daily compounding at 4.5% APY yields slightly more than monthly compounding at the same rate.
What is the difference between APR and APY in compound interest?
APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is the stated rate before compounding. APY (Annual Percentage Yield) accounts for compounding and shows the true annual return. A savings account with 4.46% APR compounding daily has an APY of 4.56%. For savings, APY is the more accurate measure. For loans, APR is used (and is actually the more accurate cost measure when it includes fees).
Recommended books to go deeper on this topic
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Timeless lessons on wealth, greed, and happiness — the most important book on how to think about money.
View on Amazon →A 6-week program to set up your savings, investments, and spending so your money works on autopilot.
View on Amazon →As an Amazon Associate, WiseIQ earns from qualifying purchases. This does not affect our editorial recommendations.