Effective Interest Rate Calculator
Calculate EAR / Effective Annual Rate
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Compounding Frequency Comparison
| Compounding | Periods/year | Effective annual rate | Equivalent nominal APR | Periodic rate |
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Formulas and Assumptions
Equivalent nominal APR = m * ((1 + EAR)^(1 / m) - 1)
Continuous compounding: EAR = e^r - 1, APR = ln(1 + EAR)
Here r is the nominal annual rate as a decimal and m is the number of compounding periods per year. The projection assumes the effective annual rate applies evenly over full and fractional years, with no fees, taxes, promotional rate changes, deposits, withdrawals, or lender-specific day-count conventions beyond the selected frequency.
Use the comparison table when two quoted rates look similar but compound on different schedules. Monthly, daily, and continuous compounding can produce different annual outcomes even when the headline APR is the same. For savings products, the effective rate is useful for comparing growth. For borrowing, it helps show the annualized cost of compounding before adding fees or payment timing.
FAQs
What does effective interest rate mean?
The effective annual interest rate is the annual rate after compounding is included. It lets you compare rates with different compounding schedules on a like-for-like annual basis.
How is this different from APR?
APR is usually a nominal annual rate. If interest compounds during the year, the effective annual rate is generally higher than the APR for positive rates.
Can I use this for loans and savings accounts?
Yes for basic rate conversion. For real loan or deposit decisions, also account for fees, payment timing, taxes, minimum balances, grace periods, and local disclosure rules.
Why include daily 360 and daily 365?
Some finance contexts use a 360-day year while others use 365. The selected frequency changes the math, so both options are included for transparent comparisons.
What should I check before relying on a quoted rate?
Check whether the rate is nominal or effective, how often interest compounds, whether fees are included, and whether the rate can change over time. Loan disclosures, bank terms, and investment documents may use similar labels for different calculations.