Albert Einstein supposedly called compound interest the eighth wonder of the world. Whether or not he really said it, the idea behind it quietly decides how much money you end up with. Understanding it is one of the highest-return five minutes you'll ever spend.
Simple vs. compound
With simple interest, you earn a return only on your original money. With compound interest, you earn a return on your money and on the returns it already earned. Each year's growth becomes next year's starting point. That small difference, repeated over decades, is the whole game.
The Rule of 72
Here's a trick you can do in your head: divide 72 by your annual return to estimate how many years it takes your money to double. At 8% a year, money doubles in roughly nine years (72 ÷ 8 = 9). At 6%, about twelve years. It's not exact, but it's close enough to feel the power instantly.
Why starting early beats investing more
Compounding rewards time more than amount. Someone who invests a modest sum in their twenties and stops can end up ahead of someone who invests much more but starts in their forties — simply because the early money had more years to double, and double again. The most valuable ingredient isn't a big paycheck. It's time, and you can't buy more of it later.
The hidden cost of fees
Compounding cuts both ways. The same force that grows your money also magnifies costs. A fund charging 2% a year versus one charging 0.1% might look like a rounding error, but over 30 years that gap can quietly eat a large slice of your final balance. Low fees are one of the few guaranteed edges in investing.
See it for yourself
Numbers on a page don't hit the same as your own numbers. Play with the Coffee Calculator to see what a small daily habit could become, then use the Savings Goal calculator to find out exactly when compounding gets you to a target. Move the sliders — the result is weirdly motivating.
This guide is general education, not personalized financial advice. Investment returns vary and are never guaranteed.