Future Value of $25,000 at 9% for 15 Years
A $25,000 investment growing at 9% per year for 15 years results in a future value of approximately $91,130.
How to use this tool
- Enter your starting amount (present value).
- Enter the return rate per period and the number of periods.
- Add a contribution per period if you invest regularly (or leave it at 0).
- Read the future value, total contributions, and total growth.
- Keep the rate and periods on the same unit (both annual or both monthly).
Calculate how $25,000 nearly quadruples over 15 years when earning a 9% annual compound return.
Frequently asked questions
- How is future value calculated?
- Future value = PV ร (1 + r)^n for a lump sum, plus PMT ร ((1 + r)^n โ 1) รท r for regular end-of-period contributions, where r is the rate per period and n the number of periods.
- What is the difference between contributions and growth?
- Total contributions are the dollars you put in (starting amount plus all periodic additions). Total growth is everything earned on top of that through compounding.
- Do the rate and periods have to match?
- Yes. Use an annual rate with a number of years, or a monthly rate with a number of months. Mixing units gives an incorrect result.
- Does this account for inflation?
- Not directly. To see future value in today's purchasing power, enter a real (after-inflation) rate of return instead of a nominal one.