📈 Compound Interest Calculator for £50,000 over 30 Years
See how your savings grow with compound interest over time.
Quick answer
£50,000 invested for 30 years at 5% annual compound interest grows to about £216,097.12 — with £166,097.12 of that being interest.
- At 3%: £121,363.12
- At 5%: £216,097.12
- At 7%: £380,612.75
- At 10%: £872,470.11
In detail: Compound Interest Calculator for £50,000 over 30 Years
£50,000 is a meaningful starting amount: over 30 years, even a modest 5% real return turns it into £216,097.12, and a stock-market-like 7% turns it into £380,612.75. The difference between those two rates — about £164,515.63 — is entirely the power of a slightly higher compounding base rate over 30 years.
Over a 30-year horizon, compounding does real work: more than half of the ending balance typically comes from growth rather than the original £50,000. A Stocks & Shares ISA sheltering the returns would preserve every pound of this; holding it in a general investment account would expose gains above the annual CGT allowance to tax.
Adding monthly contributions to the pot accelerates this substantially. Even £100/month on top of £50,000 at 5% pushes the 30-year total up to roughly £261,097.12, because each contribution gets its own compounding tail.
What this tool helps with
Future value with compound interest breakdown
What you can enter
- Initial amount (£): 50000
- Monthly addition (£): 100
- Annual interest rate (%): 5
- Number of years: 30
Why this page is useful
See how your savings grow with compound interest over time. This page loads fast, gives a direct answer, and then expands with useful context instead of burying the result under filler.