Compound Interest Works Both Ways
The Double-Edged Sword
Compounding is interest on your principal and on prior interest. Invest it and you create a snowball rolling downhill. Borrow it at high rates and you trigger an avalanche the wrong way.
When Compound Interest Works For You
The Magic of Time
Sarah (25) invests $200/mo until 65 at 8%. Mike (35) invests the same until 65.
- Sarah contributes $96,000 → grows to ~$700,000
- Mike contributes $72,000 → grows to ~$300,000
The Power of Reinvestment
Reinvest dividends/interest so every dollar earns its own earnings.
| Years | Balance @ 7% |
|---|---|
| 10 | ~$19,672 |
| 20 | ~$38,697 |
| 30 | ~$76,123 |
When Compound Interest Works Against You
The Debt Trap (Credit Cards)
Typical APR: 18–25%, often compounding daily.
$5,000 at 20% APR, paying only 2% minimum (~$100):
- Payoff time: 7+ years
- Interest paid: $4,800+
- Total cost: nearly $10,000 for a $5,000 purchase
Student Loans & Unsubsidized Interest
$30,000 at 6% unsubsidized while in school (no payments for 4 years): interest accrues and capitalizes.
- Graduation balance can exceed $37,000
The Mortgage Reality (30-Year @ 7%)
- Loan: $300,000 | Payment: ~$1,995/mo
- Interest over life: ~$418,000
- Total paid: ~$718,000
The Strategic Takeaway
Let It Work For You
- Start early: time is the multiplier.
- Automate: transfers to HYSA/401(k)/IRA.
- Reinvest dividends & interest.
- Raise your rate with every raise.
Defend Against It
- Prioritize high-APR debt payoff (guaranteed “return”).
- Avoid lifestyle creep: invest the raise.
- Be strategic with debt: low-rate, productive uses only.
Illustrations are simplified and assume constant returns; real-world results vary. Focus on habits and time in the market.
