Search
Enter a search term.

File a claim

Need to file an insurance claim? We’ll make the process as supportive, simple and swift as possible.

Thrivent Action Teams

If you want to make an impact in your community but aren't sure where to begin, we're here to help.

Contact support

Can’t find what you’re looking for? Need to discuss a complex question? Let us know—we’re happy to help.
Use the search bar above to find information throughout our website. Or choose a topic you want to learn more about.

Simple vs. compound interest: Which one works in your favor?

March 24, 2026
Last revised: March 24, 2026

Making an investment plan introduces a whole new financial landscape. With the different types of savings, investment and retirement accounts, understanding your best options, and how each applies interest, can be confusing. How do new investors know what type of account to open and which type of interest to choose?
Woman looking at computer
Weiquan Lin/Getty Images

Key takeaways

  1. Simple interest is calculated on your original amount only. Compound interest is calculated on your original amount plus everything you've already earned, so your money keeps making more money.
  2. Time is compound interest’s secret weapon. After 30 years, the same $10,000 at 5% grows to $25,000 with simple interest—but $43,219 with compound interest.
  3. If you're saving or investing, compound interest is better. It accelerates your growth because your earnings always are earning more.
  4. If you're borrowing, simple interest is usually better. It's predictable, and the cost of your loan won't snowball over time.

Whether you're opening a savings account, paying off a loan or planning for retirement, interest is part of almost every financial decision you make. But not all interest is the same. Understanding the difference between simple and compound interest, in particular, is key to managing your money well.

Simple interest is calculated only on your original amount. Compound interest is calculated on your original amount plus any interest you've already earned. That difference sounds small—but over time, it changes everything.

Simple vs. compound interest: What’s the difference?

Interest is either the cost of borrowing money or the reward for saving and investing it. Simple interest and compound interest are two fundamentally different ways of calculating that cost or reward, and understanding the distinction directly affects how quickly your money grows or how expensive your borrowing becomes over time.

  • Simple interest is calculated only on your original deposit or loan amount (the principal), so you earn or owe the same fixed amount each year. It grows in a straight line.
  • With compound interest, you earn interest on both your original deposit and any interest you've already earned. Over time, your balance accelerates—like a snowball growing as it rolls downhill.

Simple and compound interest: Side-by-side comparison

 Simple Interest Compound Interest 
Calculated on Principal only Principal + accumulated interest 
Formula In the formula I = P × r × t, I is the interest earned, P is your starting amount, r is your annual rate, and t is time in years. In the formula A = P(1 + r/n)^nt, A is your final balance, P is your starting amount, r is your rate, n is compounding frequency and t is years. 
Growth pattern Linear (steady) Exponential (accelerating) 
Typical accounts Personal/auto/student loans Savings, retirement, credit cards 
Better for Borrowers Savers and investors 
$10K at 5%, 30 yrs $25,000 $43,219 

The chart below shows $5,000 invested at 5% over 30 years. With compound interest, the curve steepens as earnings build on themselves, while simple interest grows at a steady, linear rate. By year 30, the difference is $9,110.

Compound vs Simple Interest — Thrivent
$5,000 invested at 5% for 30 years
Compound interest
Simple interest
+$9,110
Difference by year 30 Compound interest yields $21,610 vs. $12,500 with simple interest, a $9,110 advantage from letting your earnings earn.

What accounts use simple interest?

Simple interest is most common in lending products, where predictable, fixed payments matter.

  • Personal loans. Your monthly payment stays consistent because interest is calculated on the original balance only.
  • Auto loans. Same principle—you always know what you owe.
  • Most student loans. Interest accrues on the amount borrowed, not on accumulated interest.
  • Some certificates of deposit (CDs). A few CD structures pay simple interest, though many use compound.

The upside for borrowers: no surprises. You can calculate the total cost of the loan before you sign.

The upside of simple interest for borrowers

Simple interest often gets overlooked in favor of compounding, but for borrowers, it's actually the better deal. Because interest is calculated only on your original balance, the total cost of your loan is fixed from the start. You know exactly what you owe, exactly what your payments will be and exactly when you'll be done. No surprises.

It also rewards you for paying ahead. Every extra payment you make reduces your principal directly, which means less interest owed going forward. With compound interest debt, that math works against you instead.

And for short-term financial products—loans or savings vehicles with terms under a year or two—the difference between simple and compound interest is small enough that it rarely changes the outcome in a meaningful way.

So, while compound interest is the more powerful tool for building wealth over time, simple interest is the more borrower-friendly structure. Predictability has real value, especially when you're managing a budget.

What accounts use compound interest?

Compound interest is the standard in most savings and investment products, and it's the reason starting early matters so much.

The pattern: compound interest rewards patience. The longer your money stays invested, the harder it works.

How often does interest compound, and does it matter?

Yes, compounding frequency makes a real difference, especially over longer time periods. The more often interest is calculated and added to your balance, the faster your money grows.

Here is the same $10,000 at 5%, over 10 years, with different compounding schedules:

Compounding Frequency Balance After 10 Years 
Annually (once a year) $16,289 
Quarterly (4x per year) $16,436 
Monthly (12x per year) $16,470 
Daily (365x per year) $16,487 

When comparing savings accounts, look for the APY (Annual Percentage Yield),not just the interest rate. APY already accounts for compounding frequency, making it the easiest apples-to-apples comparison.

The rule of 72: Estimate your compound interest doubling time

One of the best ways to see compound interest in action is the rule of 72. Because compound interest accelerates over time, your money will eventually double, and this shortcut tells you roughly when. Just divide 72 by your annual interest rate.

Interest rate72 ÷rateYears to double
4%72 ÷ 418 years
6%72 ÷ 612 years
8%72 ÷ 89 years

This only works with compound interest. Because simple interest grows at a fixed rate, never accelerating, your balance won't double through earnings alone.

When compound interest can work against you

The same force that grows your savings can quietly accelerate your debt—especially on credit cards. If you carry a $5,000 balance on a card charging 20% APR (Annual Percentage Rate), compounded monthly:

  • After 1 year (no payments): balance grows to approximately $6,107
  • After 2 years: approximately $7,449

That's $2,449 in interest on money you never added, just from letting the balance sit. The math is unforgiving. Paying your credit card balance in full every month is one of the highest-return habits in personal finance.

Which type of interest is right for your situation?

The answer depends on which side of the transaction you're on.

If you're saving or investing, compound interest is better.
It allows your balance to grow faster because your earnings are always earning more. The earlier you start, the more time compounding has to work. This is the engine behind 401(k)s, IRAs and most long-term investment accounts.

If you're borrowing, simple interest is usually better.
Personal loans, auto loans and most student loans use simple interest, which means the cost of borrowing is predictable and won't accelerate over time.

The bottom line: Seek compounding when you're building wealth and seek simplicity when you're taking on debt. Knowing which applies—and when—helps you make more confident financial decisions.

Simple vs. compound interest FAQs

What is the main difference between simple and compound interest?

Simple interest is calculated only on your original principal, so your earnings stay constant over time. Compound interest is calculated on both the principal and any interest already earned, which means your balance grows at an accelerating rate the longer you stay invested.

Which is better for a savings account—simple or compound interest?

Compound interest is generally better for saving. Because it earns returns on accumulated interest, your balance grows faster, especially over longer time horizons. Most high-yield savings accounts and retirement accounts use compound interest.

What's the difference between APR and APY?

APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is the stated rate before compounding. APY (Annual Percentage Yield) reflects the actual return after compounding is factored in. APY is almost always slightly higher and gives you a more accurate picture of what your money will really earn.

Does compound interest hurt you on loans?

It can. Credit cards use compound interest, so unpaid interest gets added to your balance and starts earning interest itself. Most traditional loans— auto, personal, student—use simple interest, which is more predictable and typically less expensive over time.

Get expert advice

Knowing the difference between simple and compound interest is a great first step. The next one is making sure your savings and investments are set up to take full advantage. Talk to a Thrivent financial advisor about what that looks like for your situation.

Find an advisor

Investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. The product prospectus, portfolios' prospectuses and summary prospectuses contain more complete information on investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses along with other information, which investors should read carefully and consider before investing. Available at thrivent.com.

CDs offer a fixed rate of return. The value of a CD is guaranteed up to $250,000 per depositor, per insured institution, per insured institution, by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC). An investment in a money market fund is not insured or guaranteed by the FDIC or any other government agency. A money market fund seeks to maintain the value of $1.00 per share although you could lose money. The FDIC is an independent agency of the US government that protect the funds depositors place in banks and savings associations. FDIC insurance is backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government.

Hypothetical example is for illustrative purposes. May not be representative of actual results.
4.12.10