Clear estimates before bigger money decisions

Interest, savings, and loan planning in plain English.

Just Interest Calculator helps you estimate how contributions, rates, taxes, inflation, and repayment terms affect real outcomes. The calculators run client-side, and every core tool is paired with guidance so you can understand the result instead of just reading a number.

Scenario presets

Start with a real-world planning question.

Use a preset to load realistic inputs, then fine-tune them to match your numbers.

Calculator setup

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Need context?

Each calculator mode has a matching explainer.

Use the learning links to understand what each input means, when the estimate is useful, and where the model is intentionally simple.

Real Final Savings
$0
Growth Yield +0.0%
Calculated Earnings $0

Adjust the inputs to see how time, contributions, and rates change the trade-off between out-of-pocket savings and growth.

Start saving today and watch your money grow!

Comparison insight

A small contribution increase compounds hard over time.

For compound-interest planning, adding a little more each month usually matters more than obsessing over tiny differences in compounding frequency.

Mode guide

Learn how to interpret this calculator.

Every mode has a short guide with definitions, examples, common mistakes, and advice on when this estimate is or is not reliable.

Growth trajectory

How to use this site

Use the tool first, then pressure-test the assumptions.

Approval-ready finance tools need more than formulas. They need enough explanation for people to understand what the estimate can and cannot tell them.

1. Pick the planning question

Choose the mode that matches the decision you are making: long-term growth, simple accrual, target-based saving, or debt repayment.

2. Use realistic inputs

A useful estimate depends on honest numbers. Start with a preset, then adjust contribution size, rate, taxes, inflation, or term to match your own situation.

3. Read the explanation, not just the headline number

The summary, comparison card, and guide links are designed to help you interpret the result before making a real money decision.

Learn

Guides that support the calculators.

These pages are written to answer the questions people usually have after running a number: what the inputs mean, what assumptions are built in, and how to tell if the estimate is sensible.

Guide 01

Compound and simple interest guide

Learn what compounding frequency really changes, how to think about taxes and inflation, and when a simple-interest estimate is the better mental model.

Read the guide
Guide 02

Savings goal planning guide

Work backward from a target amount, understand how contribution size and time interact, and see common mistakes people make when planning big savings goals.

Read the guide
Guide 03

Loan payment guide

See how rates and term length move your monthly payment, why lower monthly cost can still mean a more expensive loan, and how to compare payoff paths.

Read the guide
Assumptions

What this site assumes, and when the estimate may be wrong.

Compounding and rates

  • Returns are modeled as steady averages, not volatile market paths.
  • Compounding frequency changes the math, but in many real cases contribution size and time matter more.
  • Actual investment returns can be lower, higher, or uneven across years.

Inflation and taxes

  • Inflation is shown as a simplified purchasing-power adjustment, not a full personal cost-of-living model.
  • Tax inputs approximate drag on gains and do not replace account-specific tax advice.
  • Jurisdiction, account type, and withdrawal timing can change the real result materially.

Loan limitations

  • Loan outputs assume a fixed-rate amortizing loan with regular payments.
  • Fees, taxes, insurance, penalties, and refinancing costs are not included.
  • Use the loan guide before treating the payment estimate as a final quote.
Methodology

How the calculations are produced.

Just Interest Calculator uses standard time-value-of-money formulas, then layers in explanatory copy so the outputs are easier to use responsibly.

Compound growth

The compound mode uses the standard future-value formula for an initial principal plus recurring monthly contributions. The inflation and tax fields then adjust that result to show a more realistic “real-world” view.

Goal planning

Savings-goal mode reverses the same future-value logic to estimate the monthly contribution needed for a target, or the number of months needed for a chosen contribution.

Loan amortization

Loan mode uses fixed-rate amortization and shows cumulative principal and cumulative interest so you can see how much of early repayment goes to financing cost.

Common questions

Questions people ask before trusting an estimate.

Does compounding frequency matter as much as contribution size?

Usually not. Monthly versus daily compounding changes the outcome, but increasing the monthly contribution or staying invested longer often has a larger practical effect.

Why show inflation if I only care about the final balance?

Because a nominal balance can make long-term plans look safer than they really are. Inflation helps frame what that money might buy in today’s dollars.

Can this replace advice from a planner or lender?

No. This site is built for planning, comparison, and education. It is intentionally simpler than a personalized plan, underwriting model, or tax projection.

What should I do before applying the result to a real decision?

Cross-check the assumptions, read the relevant guide, and compare at least one alternate scenario so you understand how sensitive the result is to your inputs.

Trust center

Policy, contact, and project information.

About the project

Understand who maintains the site, what the calculators are designed to do, and why the project stays client-side for privacy and speed.

About this site

Privacy and cookies

Review how Google services may collect data, how cookies and identifiers work, and what is and is not stored by the calculator itself.

Privacy policy

Questions or corrections

Use the public contact page if you want to report a bug, suggest a feature, or flag a content issue in one of the guides.

Contact