Updated 2026-03-20 · Calculated at 7% average annual return (S&P 500 historical average)
See how $5,000 grows each year at 12% interest, comparing monthly vs annual compounding.
| Year | Principal | Interest Earned | Annual Compounding | Monthly Compounding |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $5,000 | $634 | $5,600 | $5,634 |
| 2 | $5,000 | $1,349 | $6,272 | $6,349 |
| 3 | $5,000 | $2,154 | $7,025 | $7,154 |
| 4 | $5,000 | $3,061 | $7,868 | $8,061 |
| 5 | $5,000 | $4,083 | $8,812 | $9,083 |
| 6 | $5,000 | $5,235 | $9,869 | $10,235 |
| 7 | $5,000 | $6,534 | $11,053 | $11,534 |
| 8 | $5,000 | $7,996 | $12,380 | $12,996 |
| 9 | $5,000 | $9,645 | $13,865 | $14,645 |
| 10 | $5,000 | $11,502 | $15,529 | $16,502 |
With monthly compounding, your $5,000 grows to $16,502. With annual compounding, it grows to $15,529. The difference of $973 comes from interest earning interest more frequently.
Monthly compounding always produces a higher result because your interest starts earning its own interest 12 times per year instead of once.
A quick way to estimate how long your money takes to double: divide 72 by the interest rate. At 12%, your money doubles approximately every 6 years.
With monthly compounding, $5,000 at 12% annual interest grows to $16,502 after 10 years. That is $11,502 in interest earned. With annual compounding, you would get $15,529 — monthly compounding earns you an extra $973.
Using the Rule of 72, your money doubles in approximately 6 years at 12% annual interest. So $5,000 would become approximately $10,000 after 6 years.
This is an aggressive but achievable rate. Growth stocks and small-cap funds have historically returned 10-12%+ over long periods, though with higher volatility. Diversification is key.
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