How much will $1,000,000 grow at 15% for 30 years?

$87.5M
87.54× your money+$86.5M interest
Starting Amount
$1.00M
Final Balance
$87.5M
87.54× return
Interest Earned
$86.5M
free money

Try your own numbers

⏰ Every day you delay starting costs ~$33,216($12.1M/year of procrastination)
Why investing beats saving

Same $1,000,000 over 30 years — three different paths

HYSA 0.5%: $1.16M15% return: $87.5M~10% S&P: $19.8M
The cost of waiting

What happens if you delay investing by 10 years?

Waiting 10 years costs you $67.8M= $18,582/day of delay
The snowball effect

Interest earned per 5-year period — notice how it accelerates

Yrs 1–5
$1.11M
Yrs 6–10
$2.33M
Yrs 11–15
$4.92M
Yrs 16–20
$10.4M
Yrs 21–25
$21.8M
Yrs 26–30
$46.0M

The last 5-year period earned $46.0M 53% of all interest from just the final stretch.

Growth curve
Doubles at year 5 · 22 milestones reached
PrincipalBalance

Year-by-year breakdown

The Gain this year column shows compounding acceleration — each year earns more than the last.

YearBalanceGain this yearTotal growth
Year 1
$1.16M+$160,755+16.1%
Year 2
$1.35M+$186,597+34.7%
Year 3
$1.56M+$216,593+56.4%
Year 4
$1.82M+$251,411+81.5%
Year 5
$2.11M+$291,826+110.7%
Year 6
$2.45M+$338,739+144.6%
Year 7
$2.84M+$393,193+183.9%
Year 8
$3.30M+$456,400+229.6%
Year 9
$3.83M+$529,769+282.5%
Year 10
$4.44M+$614,931+344.0%
Year 11
$5.15M+$713,784+415.4%
Year 12
$5.98M+$828,528+498.3%
Year 13
$6.94M+$961,718+594.4%
Year 14
$8.06M+$1.12M+706.1%
Year 15
$9.36M+$1.30M+835.6%
Year 16
$10.9M+$1.50M+986.0%
Year 1710×
$12.6M+$1.75M+1160.6%
Year 1811×
$14.6M+$2.03M+1363.3%
Year 1912×
$17.0M+$2.35M+1598.5%
Year 2013×
$19.7M+$2.73M+1871.5%
Year 2114×
$22.9M+$3.17M+2188.5%
Year 2215×
$26.6M+$3.68M+2556.4%
Year 2316×
$30.8M+$4.27M+2983.4%
Year 2417×
$35.8M+$4.96M+3479.1%
Year 2518×
$41.5M+$5.75M+4054.4%
Year 2619×
$48.2M+$6.68M+4722.3%
Year 2720×
$56.0M+$7.75M+5497.5%
Year 2821×
$65.0M+$9.00M+6397.3%
Year 2922×
$75.4M+$10.4M+7441.7%
Year 3023×
$87.5M+$12.1M+8654.1%
What if you also saved monthly?

Same 15% return · 30-year horizon · starting with $1,000,000

Click any card to model it in the full calculator →

What could you do with $86.5M in earned interest?

Real-world context for your 30-year return

a paid-off home in most US citiescollege funds for 2–3 childrena financial independence milestone
The ultimate compounding milestone

In Year 14, the interest earned in a single year will exceed your entire original $1,000,000 investment. Your money's money will be making more money than you put in. That's compound interest at full power.

Frequently asked questions

How much will $1,000,000 grow at 15% for 30 years?

$1,000,000 invested at 15% annual return compounded monthly for 30 years grows to $87.5M. Your $1,000,000 earns $86.5M in interest — a 87.54× return. This assumes no withdrawals and full reinvestment of returns each month.

How long does it take $1,000,000 to double at 15%?

Using the Rule of 72, money doubles approximately every 5.0 years at 15% annual return. Starting with $1,000,000, you'd reach $2,000,000 in roughly 5.0 years. At 15% over 30 years, your money multiplies 87.54× — doubling 6.5 times.

Is 15% a realistic annual return?

15% is an aggressive assumption — above the S&P 500's ~10% historical average. Individual stocks, sector ETFs, or leveraged positions may achieve this, but it's not reliable for planning purposes. Financial planners typically use 6–8% for retirement projections. Use 15% to model optimistic best-case scenarios.

What is the difference between compound and simple interest on $1,000,000?

With simple interest at 15%, $1,000,000 earns $150,000 per year — $4.50M total over 30 years (final: $5.50M). With compound interest, the same principal grows to $87.5M — $82.0M more. The gap accelerates over time.

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Compounded monthly · No taxes, fees, or inflation adjustments · Past returns do not guarantee future results · WealthSpott Q1 2026