See what $1,500/month invested every month for 30 years could grow to, with the 5%, 7% and 10% return scenarios, the compound-growth formula and a year-by-year chart.
| Annual return | Future value | Total growth |
|---|---|---|
| 5% | $1,248,388 | $708,388 |
| 7% | $1,829,956 | $1,289,956 |
| 10% | $3,390,732 | $2,850,732 |
FV = PMT × [ ((1 + i)n − 1) ÷ i ], where PMT = $1,500, i = monthly rate (7%/12), n = 360 months.
Investing $1,500/month every month for 30 years means contributing $540,000 of your own money. At a 7% average annual return — roughly the long-run average of a diversified stock-market index fund after inflation is set aside — compounding turns that into about $1,829,956. The difference, $1,289,956, is investment growth: returns earning further returns. The earlier and longer you invest, the larger that growth share becomes, which is why starting monthly contributions young is so powerful. These figures assume a constant return and reinvested earnings; real markets fluctuate year to year, and taxes and fees reduce net returns. Use them as a planning illustration, then model your own numbers in the full calculator. Past performance does not guarantee future results.