Savings Calculator
Estimate future savings balances, interest earned, and progress toward a target balance with the WealthCalcLab savings calculator.
Updated April 10, 2026
What this calculator does
This savings calculator helps you project how a current balance and regular contributions can grow over time. It is useful for emergency funds, short- to medium-term goals, and disciplined cash reserve planning.
Unlike a pure investment projection, a savings plan often focuses on reliability, contribution discipline, and target tracking. That makes it important to separate your own deposits from the interest earned along the way.
If you have a target balance in mind, the calculator also shows the remaining gap so you can decide whether your contribution rate is enough.
This page is built for users who need a defensible planning answer, not just quick arithmetic. It translates "Current savings", "Monthly contribution", and "Annual interest rate" into "Projected savings", "Total contributions", and "Interest earned" so the trade-off is visible in one place instead of being hidden behind a single number.
How to use it
Enter your current savings balance, expected monthly contribution, annual rate, and time horizon.
Add a target balance in Advanced options if you want to compare the projection against a savings goal.
Review the chart to see whether progress is mostly coming from your deposits or from interest.
Start with "Current savings", "Monthly contribution", and "Annual interest rate", then check whether the first output cards already answer your question. After that, add advanced assumptions such as "Savings goal" only when they are real enough to change the decision.
Formula
Ending balance = prior balance × (1 + monthly rate) + monthly contributionThe projection runs month by month so contributions and interest accumulation can be tracked separately.
Methodology
The calculator simulates growth monthly using the annual interest rate converted into a monthly rate.
Monthly contributions are added throughout the projection, then the balance is grown for that month.
Goal gap is reported as zero when the projected balance meets or exceeds the target balance.
The model maps "Current savings", "Monthly contribution", and "Annual interest rate" into "Projected savings", "Total contributions", and "Interest earned" using the formulas shown on the page. Keeping those relationships visible makes it easier to separate the core economics from the optional adjustments and to understand which assumption is actually moving the answer.
Worked example
A saver who starts with 5,000 and contributes 400 per month at 4% can build a substantial reserve over a decade, even though most of the ending balance still comes from deposits.
That is why a savings calculator is useful: it shows whether your contribution plan is doing enough heavy lifting rather than relying on unrealistic interest expectations.
How to interpret the results
Projected savings is the final estimated balance. Interest earned tells you how much the account generated above what you deposited yourself.
If the goal gap stays large, you may need more time, a higher contribution rate, or a different expected return assumption.
Read "Projected savings" first, then use the other summary cards, the chart, and the detailed table to judge contributions, growth, and future purchasing power. In most finance decisions, the best option is the one that stays strong across the full picture, not just the one with the most attractive first number.
Common mistakes
- Assuming savings account rates will stay unchanged for many years.
- Setting an aggressive target but not increasing the monthly contribution enough to support it.
- Treating a short-term savings goal like a high-return investment plan.
Key terms
Quick definitions for the finance terms that matter on this page.
Savings goal
A target balance you want the account to reach by the end of the planning horizon.
Interest earned
The portion of the final balance that comes from account growth rather than deposits.
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers on assumptions, interpretation, and the limits of each estimate.
What if my rate changes over time?
This version assumes a steady annual rate, so use a conservative average if you expect the rate to vary.
Can I use this for an emergency fund goal?
Yes. It is well suited to target-based reserve planning because it shows both the final balance and the remaining goal gap.
Why is interest earned smaller than I expected?
On shorter savings horizons, regular deposits usually contribute more to the final balance than interest does.
What happens if I leave the goal blank or zero?
The projection still works. Goal gap will show zero if no target balance is provided.
Which inputs change "Projected savings" the most?
Start with "Current savings", "Monthly contribution", and "Annual interest rate". Those assumptions usually drive "Projected savings" far more than any optional adjustment. Once the base case is right, use advanced inputs only to reflect real fees, taxes, or timing differences.
What does "Projected savings" tell me in practical terms?
"Projected savings" is the fastest read on the outcome, but it should not be treated as the whole decision by itself. Use it as the headline number, then read the chart, table, and other summary cards to understand what is happening underneath.
Why should I look at "Total contributions" as well as "Projected savings"?
Because "Projected savings", "Total contributions", and "Interest earned" answer different parts of the same decision. A scenario can look good on the first number and still be weak once timing, total cost, or long-run value is included.
When should I use "Savings goal"?
Use "Savings goal" when it materially changes the economics of the decision. If it is uncertain or optional, compare the base case with and without it rather than guessing once and trusting the result.
What happens if the advanced options stay at zero?
Then the calculator runs a simpler base case using the main inputs only. That is often the best place to start, because it makes it easier to see what changes once optional costs, fees, taxes, or adjustments are layered in.
Does the chart add anything beyond the summary cards?
Yes. The chart shows how the result develops over time, which is often the real decision point. It is especially useful when two scenarios have a similar headline result but very different timing or cost patterns.
What is the detailed table useful for?
Use the table when you need the period-by-period breakdown behind the summary. That is usually where users spot front-loaded interest, a slow payoff path, a contribution gap, or the exact point where one scenario becomes better than another.
Should I compare more than one savings plan?
Yes. A base case and one stressed case usually give a much better planning view than a single run. Change one major assumption at a time so you can see what is actually responsible for the difference.
Related calculators
Continue your planning with tools that answer the next logical question.
Compound Interest Calculator
Project future value, total contributions, and compounding growth with optional monthly additions and inflation adjustment.
Inflation Calculator
Measure future cost, lost purchasing power, and inflation-adjusted value over time.
Retirement Calculator
Project retirement savings, estimated retirement income, and the gap between your target lifestyle and projected portfolio.
SIP Calculator
Project systematic investment plan growth with monthly contributions, step-up assumptions, and long-term return estimates.
Important disclaimer
For Morocco, confirm local treatment of product fees, tax treatment, contribution timing, and inflation assumptions before using the output for a final application, filing, or contract decision.