Calcolatore di Risparmio — Formula
How Savings Growth Is Calculated
A savings calculator projects what your money will be worth after a set period, accounting for your starting balance, regular deposits, and the interest rate. It uses the same compound interest math as investment calculators, but typically with lower, more predictable rates since savings accounts don't fluctuate like stocks.
The Formula
FV = P(1+r)^n + PMT * [(1+r)^n - 1] / r
When to Use This
Setting a savings goal and figuring out how long it takes to reach it. Comparing high-yield savings accounts (4-5% APY in 2025-2026) against keeping cash in a checking account (0.01-0.1% APY). Planning an emergency fund, a vacation fund, or a house down payment.
Savings Accounts vs. Investments
Savings accounts are FDIC-insured up to $250,000. Your money won't lose value. But savings rates rarely beat inflation over the long term. A 4.5% savings rate with 3% inflation gives you only 1.5% real growth. For goals more than 5 years out, investing typically produces better returns despite the added risk.
What Affects Your Savings Most
Consistency of deposits matters more than the rate for most people. Depositing $500/month at 4% beats depositing $200/month at 5% by a wide margin. The rate helps, but the habit of putting money away is what builds the balance.
Common Mistakes
Esempio Risolto
$5,000 initial deposit with $200/month at 4.5% APY for 10 years.
- Monthly rate = 4.5% / 12 = 0.375%
- Months = 10 × 12 = 120
- Initial deposit grows to: $5,000 × 1.00375^120 = $7,834
- Contributions grow to: $200 × (1.00375^120 - 1) / 0.00375 = $30,038
- Future value = $7,834 + $30,038 = $37,872
- Total contributed = $5,000 + $24,000 = $29,000
- Interest earned = $37,872 - $29,000 = $8,872