£1,000 Compounded: 20 years vs 30 years
Same starting amount, same rate — different horizon. Here's what extra time does to the final balance.
After 20 years vs 30 years at 5%
- 20 years: £2,653.30
- 30 years: £4,321.94
- Extra growth from the extra 10 years: £1,668.64
The headline insight: the extra 10 years isn't worth 10/20 more — it's worth 63% more. That's the non-linear compounding tail.
Full calculator pages
Why the tail is so big
Compound interest is front-loaded in absolute terms but back-loaded in growth. In the first 20 years, £1,000 grows to £2,653.30 — a gain of £1,653.30. In the additional 10 years that follow, it almost doubles again to £4,321.94, because each year's gain is percentage-of-a-larger-number. This is the reason that starting a pension at 25 rather than 35 is almost always worth more than working an extra year at the end of your career.
At different rates
- 3% (cash ISA long-term): £1,806.11 after 20y, £2,427.26 after 30y
- 5% (balanced portfolio): £2,653.30 after 20y, £4,321.94 after 30y
- 7% (equity tracker long-term average): £3,869.68 after 20y, £7,612.26 after 30y
Real vs nominal return
These figures are nominal — they ignore inflation. At 3% long-run CPI, the £4,321.94 after 30 years has purchasing power equivalent to roughly £1,780.58 in today's money. Compounding still wins, but the real-return figure is what matters for long-term planning.