Learn future value, how compounding works, and why finance uses future value to project savings, investments, and long-term goals.
Future value (FV) is the amount a sum of money will grow to over time after earning interest or investment returns. It answers a forward-looking question: if you have money today, what will it be worth later?
Future value is the mirror image of present value. Together, both concepts are built on the time value of money.
For a single sum compounded at a constant rate:
Where:
\(FV\) = future value
\(PV\) = present value
\(r\) = periodic return or interest rate
\(n\) = number of periods
The logic is simple: each period, the money grows, and the next period’s growth starts from a larger base.
Future value is used whenever people need to project what today’s decisions could become later.
It helps savers estimate the future size of retirement accounts, education funds, and emergency savings.
It helps investors see what current capital can become if returns are reinvested.
It helps compare growth projections and understand the forward effect of capital allocation decisions.
Suppose you invest $15,000 at 6% annually for 8 years.
So a $15,000 investment becomes about $23,906 after eight years if the 6% return is sustained and reinvested.
Many real savings plans involve repeated contributions, not one lump sum. If you contribute the same amount regularly, the future value depends on:
how much you contribute
how often you contribute
the return earned
how long you keep contributing
That is why starting early can matter so much. Early contributions get the most time to compound.
Compounding does not have to be annual. It may be monthly, quarterly, daily, or continuous.
More frequent compounding increases future value, but the effect is usually smaller than the effect of:
earning a higher return
investing for more years
contributing consistently
Future value and present value are inverse concepts.
future value moves money forward in time
present value moves money backward in time
Finance uses both because some decisions are about how current money grows, while others are about what future money is worth today.
A future dollar amount can be larger in nominal terms but less impressive after inflation.
Future value assumes returns remain in the account and continue compounding. Pulling money out changes the result.
Real investment returns are rarely smooth. Future value is most useful as a planning framework, not a guarantee.
Present Value: The current value of a future amount.
Compound Interest: The process that drives future value growth.
Time Value of Money: The principle underlying all compounding and discounting.
Annuity: A stream of equal recurring payments or contributions.
Annual Percentage Yield (APY): The effective annual yield after compounding.