Compound Interest on $1,000 at 10% for 10 Years
$1,000 grows to $2,593.74 with 10% annual compound interest over 10 years.
Final Amount
$2,593.74
Principal
$1,000
Interest Earned
$1,593.74
Money Multiplier
2.59x
How $1,000 grows at 10%
Formula: A = P × (1 + r)n = $1,000 × (1 + 0.1)10 = $2,593.74.
With compound interest, you earn interest on your interest. After year 1, your $1,000 earns $100.00 in interest. By year 10, the interest is compounding on a much larger base.
Your money grows 2.59x over 10 years. The total interest earned ($1,593.74) is 159.4% of your initial investment.
FAQ
- What is the compound interest on $1,000 at 10% for 10 years?
- $1,000 at 10% annual compound interest for 10 years grows to $2,593.74. The interest earned is $1,593.74. Your money grows 2.59x.
- How is compound interest calculated?
- Compound interest uses the formula: A = P × (1 + r)^n, where P is principal ($1,000), r is the annual rate (10% = 0.1), and n is years (10). A = $1,000 × (1 + 0.1)^10 = $2,593.74.
- How much would $1,000 be worth in 10 years?
- At 10% annual compound interest, $1,000 becomes $2,593.74 in 10 years. That's a total return of 159.4%.
- What if I add monthly contributions?
- This calculation assumes a one-time investment. Regular contributions dramatically increase the final amount due to compounding. Use our full compound interest calculator to model contributions.