The fixed amount you commit to saving every month. Even ₹500 a month adds up — this is the single biggest lever you control.
The annual return your savings account or FD pays you. "p.a." means "per annum" — per year. Banks compound this monthly, meaning you earn interest on your interest too.
The amount you put in on Day 1. Starting with even a small lump sum cuts your timeline significantly because interest starts working from the very first month.
Free money — the extra amount your bank pays you just for keeping your savings with them. Higher interest rate = the bank works harder for you.
Monthly compounding means your interest earns interest 12 times a year instead of once. Over 10 years, monthly compounding can add 5–8% more to your final balance vs annual.
Your annual raise applied to your SIP/contribution — e.g., 5% growth means if you contribute ₹4,000 now, next year you'll contribute ₹4,200. This models real salary growth and massively accelerates wealth.
This is the wealth your money created without you working for it. A large gap between Total Contributions and End Balance means compounding did the heavy lifting — exactly what good financial planning looks like.
₹10,000 today is worth more than ₹10,000 three years from now because of what it can earn in the meantime. Starting early — even with less — always beats starting late with more.
Find out exactly how much you need to retire comfortably — and whether your current savings rate is on track. Includes inflation adjustment and corpus projections.
Plan Your Retirement →Calculate your monthly EMI, total interest paid over the loan tenure, and how extra prepayments can save you lakhs. Essential before signing any home loan.
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