Simple vs Compound Interest: What's the Difference?
Interest is the cost of borrowing money or the reward for saving it. Understanding the difference between simple and compound interest is fundamental to making smart financial decisions about loans, savings, and investments.
Quick Comparison
| Feature | Simple Interest | Compound Interest |
|---|---|---|
| Formula | A = P(1 + rt) | A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt) |
| Interest Calculated On | Original principal only | Principal + accumulated interest |
| Growth Pattern | Linear (same amount each period) | Exponential (accelerates over time) |
| $10,000 at 5% for 10 Years | $15,000 ($5,000 interest) | $16,289 ($6,289 interest, annual) |
| $10,000 at 5% for 30 Years | $25,000 ($15,000 interest) | $43,219 ($33,219 interest, annual) |
| Common Uses | Car loans, some personal loans | Savings accounts, credit cards, mortgages |
| Best For | Borrowers (less total interest) | Savers (more total earnings) |
How Simple Interest Works
Simple interest is calculated only on the original amount you deposit or borrow, known as the principal. The formula is straightforward: Interest = Principal x Rate x Time. If you deposit $10,000 at 5% simple interest for one year, you earn $500. In year two, you earn another $500 calculated on the same $10,000 principal, regardless of the interest you already earned. After 10 years, you will have earned exactly $5,000 in interest for a total of $15,000.
Simple interest is most commonly found in auto loans, some personal loans, and short-term lending. Treasury bills and some bonds also use simple interest calculations. Borrowers benefit from simple interest because the total interest paid is predictable and lower than compound interest over the same period. If you borrow $20,000 for a car at 5% simple interest for 5 years, the total interest is $5,000 regardless of your payment schedule.
How Compound Interest Works
Compound interest is calculated on the principal plus all previously accumulated interest. This creates a snowball effect: each period, your interest earns its own interest. Albert Einstein reportedly called compound interest the eighth wonder of the world, and the math shows why.
Consider $10,000 invested at 5% compounded annually. In year one, you earn $500 (5% of $10,000). In year two, you earn $525 (5% of $10,500). In year three, $551.25 (5% of $11,025). The interest earned each year grows because the base amount grows. After 30 years, your $10,000 becomes $43,219, earning $33,219 in interest. With simple interest, you would have earned only $15,000.
The frequency of compounding matters significantly. Daily compounding earns slightly more than monthly, which earns more than annual. A high-yield savings account advertising 5.00% APY (Annual Percentage Yield) with daily compounding means you earn a tiny fraction of interest every day, and each subsequent day's calculation includes that previous interest. Over a year, daily compounding at a 5% nominal rate produces an effective rate of about 5.13%.
Practical Examples
Savings Account
You deposit $5,000 in a high-yield savings account at 4.5% APY. With compound interest (daily), after 5 years you will have approximately $6,261, earning $1,261 in interest. With simple interest at the same rate, you would have only $6,125, earning $1,125. The compounding advantage grows with larger balances and longer time horizons.
Credit Card Debt
Compound interest works against you on credit card debt. A $5,000 balance at 22% APR compounded daily, with minimum payments only ($100/month), takes over 9 years to pay off and costs roughly $5,840 in interest. The high rate combined with daily compounding causes interest to accumulate rapidly, which is why paying off credit cards quickly is critical.
Retirement Savings
Contributing $500/month to a retirement account earning 7% compounded monthly for 30 years results in approximately $566,760. Your total contributions are only $180,000, meaning compound interest generated $386,760 — more than double what you put in. Starting 10 years earlier with the same contributions produces roughly $1,219,970, demonstrating that time is the most powerful variable in compound interest.