{"title":"What Is Compound Interest? A Beginner's Guide","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/financial-basics/what-is-compound-interest","category":{"slug":"financial-basics","name":"Financial Basics"},"creator":{"name":"Money with Pennies","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCn3HI-FEByLxVOwObf3ZxKA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWhkxNLOGFk"},"tldr":"Compound interest explained for beginners: how interest earns interest, simple vs compound, the Rule of 72, and why fees and time matter so much.","totalDurationSeconds":641,"difficulty":"easy","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: What Compound Interest Actually Is","text":"Compound interest is interest earning its own interest. You put money in, it earns a return, and next year that return also earns a return. The video shows this with a picture of money growing while someone sleeps - coins and cash piling up on their own. Left alone long enough, the growth curve bends up instead of climbing in a straight line. That bend is the whole idea. Your money starts doing the work for you."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Simple vs Compound - Meet Kevin and Cindy","text":"Kevin and Cindy both start with $1000 at a 10% rate for 30 years. Kevin earns simple interest, so he gets $100 every year, always on the original $1000. He ends with $4000. Cindy earns compound interest, so each year the interest is calculated on her new, bigger total. She ends with $15,863. Same start, same rate, same time. The only difference is that Cindy's interest kept earning interest."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: How It Builds Year After Year","text":"Here is the mechanic in slow motion. Year one, $1000 grows to $1100. Year two, the 10% is figured on $1100, not $1000, so you land at $1210. Year three runs on $1210 and gets you to $1331. Each year's total feeds into the next year's calculation. The arrows in the video point from one total to the next, so you can watch the base you earn on get bigger every single year."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: The Snowball Effect on a Growth Curve","text":"Plot both people on a chart and the story gets obvious. Kevin's simple-interest line is nearly flat, creeping up to about $4000 over 30 years. Cindy's compound line barely differs at first, then curves hard upward toward $16,000. The gap between the two lines is small early on and huge later. That widening gap is the snowball. It rewards patience, which is why compounding is so powerful for anyone with time on their side."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: The Rule of 72 for Doubling Time","text":"Want a fast estimate of how long it takes to double your money? Divide 72 by your interest rate. At 1%, that is 72 years. At 2%, about 36 years. At 10%, roughly 7.2 years. At 15%, under 5 years. The bar chart in the video shrinks fast as the rate climbs, which shows why the rate you earn matters so much. A savings account at 1% barely doubles in a lifetime."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: How Fees Quietly Eat Your Returns","text":"A 1% or 2% fund fee sounds tiny. Over 30 years it is not. The chart stacks five wealth curves for fees of 0%, 0.2%, 1%, 1.5%, and 2%. They start together and fan apart as time passes, because the fee both takes a cut and shrinks the balance that could have compounded. Index funds usually charge under 0.4%, mutual funds often 1-2%, and hedge funds more. Small percentage, big long-term difference."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Start Now - Small Choices Compound Too","text":"Compounding cuts both ways. A $5 coffee today is money that could have grown to about $80 in 30 years if invested. Buy one every week for a year and that is $260 spent instead of saved. The point is not to skip every treat. It is to see that small, regular amounts add up when you give them time. Start with what you can, stay consistent, and let the years do the heavy lifting."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-07-13T19:35:36.248Z","published":"2026-07-13T15:09:34.206Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}