$500,000 Invested for 30 Years

See what $500,000 invested once for 30 years could grow to, with the 5%, 7% and 10% return scenarios, the compound-growth formula and a year-by-year chart.

Future value at 7% annual return
$3,806,128
$500,000 for 30 years · you contribute $500,000 · growth $3,306,128
$1,107,776 in today's dollars, adjusted for current 4.2% inflation
📊 Live 10-yr Treasury (risk-free): 4.48% as of May 2026 📈 Live US inflation (CPI): 4.2% May 2026

Growth over 30 years (at 7%)

Your money vs investment growth

Return-rate scenarios

Annual returnFuture valueTotal growth
5%$2,160,971$1,660,971
7%$3,806,128$3,306,128
10%$8,724,701$8,224,701
Formula: FV = P × (1 + r)n, where P = $500,000, r = 7% per year, n = 30 years.
Open the full Compound Interest Calculator →

Related projections

$1,000 for 5 yrs$1,000 for 10 yrs$1,000 for 20 yrs$1,000 for 30 yrs$5,000 for 5 yrs$5,000 for 10 yrs$5,000 for 20 yrs$5,000 for 30 yrs$10,000 for 5 yrs$10,000 for 10 yrs

How $500,000 grows over 30 years

A one-time $500,000 investment left to compound for 30 years at a 7% average annual return grows to about $3,806,128 — turning your original $500,000 into $3,306,128 of additional growth on top of what you put in. Because returns compound on previous returns, the balance curve steepens over time; most of the gain in a long horizon arrives in the final years. 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.