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$1,000 Per Month at 7% Interest for 10 Years

$1,000.00/month at 7% for 10 years grows to $174,094.47

Total interest earned: $54,094.47 · Total contributed: $120,000.00

How much is $1,000 Per Month at 7% Interest for 10 Years?

Investing $1,000.00 per month at 7% annual interest for 10 years yields $174,094.47. Your total contributions equal $120,000.00, meaning you earn $54,094.47 in compound interest alone. This calculation assumes monthly compounding with contributions made at the end of each month.

Growth Summary

Starting Amount

$0.00

Monthly Contribution

$1,000.00

Interest Rate

7%

Time Period

10 years

Interest Earned

$54,094.47

Final Balance

$174,094.47

Where your money comes from:

Contributions 69%
Interest 31%

Year-by-Year Breakdown

Year Contributions Interest Earned Balance
1 $12,000.00 $464.88 $12,464.88
2 $12,000.00 $1,365.96 $25,830.84
3 $12,000.00 $2,332.19 $40,163.03
4 $12,000.00 $3,368.26 $55,531.29
5 $12,000.00 $4,479.24 $72,010.53
6 $12,000.00 $5,670.52 $89,681.05
7 $12,000.00 $6,947.93 $108,628.97
8 $12,000.00 $8,317.67 $128,946.65
9 $12,000.00 $9,786.44 $150,733.09
10 $12,000.00 $11,361.38 $174,094.47

How This Was Calculated

This calculation combines compound interest on the principal with the future value of monthly contributions:

A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt) + PMT × [((1 + r/n)^(nt) - 1) / (r/n)]

Where P = $0.00 (initial), PMT = $1,000.00 (monthly contribution), r = 7% (0.07), n = 12 (monthly compounding), t = 10 years. Each monthly contribution is added, then interest is applied for that period, creating additional compound growth.

Try with Your Own Numbers →

Use our free compound interest calculator with custom inputs

Frequently Asked Questions

The total is calculated in two parts: the compound growth on your initial principal, plus the future value of your monthly contribution annuity. Each monthly deposit earns compound interest from the date it's added, so earlier contributions grow the most.

Monthly contributions make an enormous difference over time. For example, $1,000 per month at 7% for 10 years produces far more than a single lump sum of $120,000 invested at the end, because each contribution compounds independently over the remaining time period.

Mathematically, a lump sum invested early usually outperforms dollar-cost averaging because the money has more time to compound. However, most people don't have a large lump sum available, making regular monthly contributions the practical path to building wealth.

At $500 per month with the same 7% rate for 10 years, you'd accumulate approximately half the total. The interest earned would also be roughly half. See our $500/month scenario for exact numbers.

Related Calculations

$500 Per Month at 7% Interest for 20 Years

Result: $261,982.70

$1,000 Per Month at 10% Interest for 30 Years

Result: $2,279,325.32

$100 Per Month for 30 Years at 7% Interest

Result: $122,708.75

$10,000 at 7% Interest for 10 Years

Result: $20,096.61

Related Reading

Compound Interest Calculator: How It Works and Why It Matters → Rule of 72 Explained: How Long to Double Your Money → Compound Interest vs Simple Interest: What's the Difference? →