Future Value Calculator
Inputs
Results
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Growth Schedule
The schedule is rounded for display. Calculations use unrounded values.
| Run the calculator to generate a schedule. |
Future Value Formula and Assumptions
The lump-sum future value formula is FV = PV x (1 + i)^n, where PV is the starting balance, i is the rate per compounding period, and n is the number of compounding periods.
Recurring deposits use an annuity formula at the selected deposit frequency: FVdeposits = PMT x (((1 + j)^N - 1) / j). If deposits are made at the beginning of each deposit period, the deposit future value is multiplied by (1 + j). When the effective deposit-period rate is zero, the deposit future value is simply PMT x N.
For APY, the calculator treats the entered rate as an effective annual rate. For APR, it divides the nominal rate by the selected compounding frequency. Annual fees reduce the annual return assumption before compounding. Inflation does not reduce the nominal projected balance; it discounts the final amount to estimate today's purchasing power.
How to Use the Future Value Calculator
- Enter the starting balance. Use zero if you only want to model future deposits.
- Enter a recurring deposit and choose how often it is made.
- Select APY for an effective annual yield or APR for a nominal rate with compounding.
- Choose whether deposits happen at the beginning or end of each deposit period.
- Add optional fee and inflation assumptions if you want a more conservative planning estimate.
- Copy the result or download the CSV schedule for your own notes.
This tool is for educational estimates only. It does not forecast market returns, taxes, product availability, fees charged by a specific provider, or whether an investment or savings product is suitable for you.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is future value?
Future value is the estimated amount a present balance or stream of deposits may be worth after earning a stated return for a stated time.
What is the difference between beginning and end deposits?
Beginning deposits are made before growth for that deposit period, so they earn one extra period of return. End deposits are made after that period's growth.
Can the annual rate be negative?
Yes. The calculator accepts negative annual rates down to -50% to model loss scenarios. It rejects rates and time horizons that make the math unstable or unrealistic for this tool.
Is inflation included automatically?
No. The inflation field is an assumption you control. Set it to zero if you only want nominal future value.
Is my data private?
Yes. All calculations run in your browser. The page does not send your entered amounts to a backend.
Sources and References
The formulas are standard time-value-of-money formulas. These references support the compound-interest and investor-education context used on this page.
