When it comes to personal finance, few concepts are as important to understand as compound interest. Many consumer finance products use this form of interest. Knowing about compound interest can save you from a potential bankruptcy.
The process of adding interest to principal is called compounding. Depending upon the type of personal loans, student loans, mortgages or other loans in question, interest is compounded on a regular schedule, be it daily, monthly, etc. Keep in mind that once compounding begins, interest itself earns more interest. This is a credit card company’s bread and butter, an easy way for a consumer to fall rapidly into debt. To understand the true cost of any credit card or loan, interest-related factors like how often the remaining balance is compounded and the annual percentage rate must be considered.
Compound interest should not be confused with simple interest. Simple interest is charged on principal balance only and doesn’t charge interest on accrued interest as compound interest does. Simple interest is quite rare in the field of consumer finance.
Here’s the math you need to know, using hypothetical numbers: