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If I Invest $1,000 Per Month for 10 Years — Compound Interest Calculator

Save $1,000 per month for 10 years at 7% return and you'll have $173,085. See year-by-year growth, contributions vs interest earned, and comparison at different return rates.

Last verified: 5 May 2026

Saving $1,000 per month for 10 years at 7% return gives you: $173,085

Final Balance

$173,085

Your Contributions (69%)

$120,000

Interest Earned (31%)

$53,085

Year-by-Year Growth

YearBalanceContributionsInterest Earned
1$12,393$12,000$393
2$25,681$24,000$1,681
3$39,930$36,000$3,930
4$55,209$48,000$7,209
5$71,593$60,000$11,593
6$89,161$72,000$17,161
7$107,999$84,000$23,999
8$128,199$96,000$32,199
9$149,859$108,000$41,859
10$173,085$120,000$53,085

Comparison at Different Return Rates

Return RateTypeFinal BalanceInterest Earned
4%Savings account$147,250$27,250
5%Conservative$155,282$35,282
7%(default)Growth / ETF$173,085$53,085
10%Aggressive$204,845$84,845

The Rule of 72

Your money doubles approximately every 10.3 years at 7% return. This is calculated using the Rule of 72: divide 72 by your annual return rate to estimate doubling time. At 4% it takes ~18 years, at 5% ~14.4 years, and at 10% ~7.2 years.

Inflation-Adjusted Value

After adjusting for ~3% average annual inflation, your $173,085 would have the purchasing power of approximately $128,791 in today's dollars. Inflation reduces buying power over time, which is why investing to outpace inflation is important.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much will $1,000 per month be worth in 10 years?

If you save $1,000 per month for 10 years at a 7% average annual return, you'll have approximately $173,085. Of that, $120,000 is your contributions and $53,085 is compound interest earned.

What is the power of compound interest?

Compound interest means you earn returns on both your original investment and on the returns already earned. Over long periods, this creates exponential growth — your money starts growing faster and faster. Einstein reportedly called it the eighth wonder of the world. At 7% annual returns, your money doubles roughly every 10 years.

Should I save in a bank or invest?

Bank savings accounts in Australia typically earn 4–5% interest and are guaranteed by the government up to $250,000. Investing in diversified index funds or ETFs has historically returned 7–10% per year on average but comes with short-term volatility. For money you need within 1–2 years, a high-interest savings account is safer. For goals 5+ years away, investing generally produces better long-term results after inflation.

Sourced from

3 primary sources
  • ASFA-Retirement-StandardASFA Retirement Standard
    ASFA Retirement Standard — comfortable & modest budgets

    Comfortable retirement target: ~$595k (single) / ~$690k (couple) lump sum at 67, generating ~$53k/$74k annual income alongside the Age Pension.

  • APRA-Super-ReturnsAPRA Quarterly Statistics
    APRA Quarterly Superannuation Performance

    Industry-wide super fund performance benchmarks by category (default MySuper, Choice, SMSF). Used to calibrate compound-growth assumptions in retirement and projection calcs.

  • Services-Australia-Age-PensionServices Australia
    Age Pension — assets and income tests

    Means-tested. Lower of income test or assets test applies. Pension age is 67. Family home generally exempt from assets test; super in accumulation phase exempt below age pension age.

General information and estimates only — not financial, tax, or legal advice. Always verify with a licensed adviser or the ATO.