Compound interest is interest earned on interest. Instead of calculating gains only on your original amount, each period's interest is added to the balance โ and the next period's interest is calculated on that bigger number. The effect starts slow and then accelerates, which is why it's been called the most powerful force in personal finance. It works just as relentlessly for you in savings as it works against you in debt.
Simple vs. compound interest
Simple interest is calculated only on the principal. Put $1,000 at 10% simple interest and you earn $100 every year โ forever flat. Compound interest reinvests each year's gain: year one earns $100, but year two earns 10% of $1,100 = $110, year three earns $121, and so on. The gap between the two lines widens every single year.
Why the curve bends upward
Because the base keeps growing, the dollar amount of each period's interest keeps growing too. Plotted over time, simple interest is a straight line; compound interest is a curve that bends steeply upward. The longer the time horizon, the more dramatic the difference โ most of compounding's magic happens in the final years, not the first.
Want a quick estimate of how long money takes to double? Divide 72 by the annual rate. At 6% a year, money doubles in about 12 years; at 9%, about 8 years. It's an approximation, but a remarkably handy one for sizing up any rate of return โ or any rate of debt.
Why starting early beats starting big
Compounding rewards time even more than amount. Someone who invests modestly in their twenties and then stops can end up ahead of someone who invests more but starts in their forties, simply because the early money had more years to compound. The most valuable input you control isn't how much you add โ it's how soon you start.
The dark side: compounding debt
The same mechanism runs in reverse on what you owe. Credit card balances compound (often daily), so unpaid interest is added to the balance and then charged interest itself. That's why a high-rate balance left to "minimum payments" can snowball for years โ you're on the losing end of the exact curve that builds wealth for savers. It's the engine behind Maxed Out.
How to put it to work
- Start now, even small. Years are the ingredient you can't buy back.
- Reinvest gains, dividends, and interest so they compound too.
- Kill high-interest debt fast โ you can't out-earn a 24% balance.
- Be patient. The steep part of the curve arrives later; don't quit before it does.
The bottom line
Compound interest turns time into money. Pointed at savings and investments, it's the closest thing to a free tailwind in finance. Pointed at debt, it's a trap that tightens the longer you wait. Either way, the lesson is the same: the clock is the most powerful variable, so start it early and keep it on your side.
General education, not financial advice. Returns are never guaranteed.