
Compound Interest: How Your Money Grows Over Time π±
Compound interest is one of the most powerful concepts in personal finance. Itβs the idea that your money doesnβt just earn interest once β it earns interest on the interest it has already earned. Over time, this effect can turn small savings into significant wealth.
What is Compound Interest
Imagine you save Β£100 each month in an account earning 5% interest annually. In the first year, you earn interest on your initial deposits. In the second year, you earn interest not just on your deposits, but also on the interest from the first year. This snowball effect is compounding in action.
Why Compounding Matters
The earlier you start saving and investing, the more time your money has to grow. Even modest contributions can grow substantially over decades. Compounding rewards patience, consistency, and long-term planning.
Example
Letβs say you save Β£100 per month at 5% annual interest:
- After 5 years: ~Β£6,500
- After 10 years: ~Β£14,000
- After 20 years: ~Β£36,000
As you can see, your money accelerates growth over time β the longer you stay invested, the bigger the impact.
Key Takeaways
- Start as early as possible to maximize growth.
- Be consistent β small, regular contributions add up.
- Let your money work for you β patience is rewarded.
Learn More
Want to see how compounding works with your budget and goals? Check out our Start Here guide and Investing resources.