Interest Capitalization Calculator

Turn interest into principal with flexible capitalization rules. Model daily accrual, monthly posting, and deposits. Download tables, review charts, and plan smarter today easily.

Inputs
Use the form to model interest accrual, posting (capitalization), and optional recurring contributions.
Examples: USD, EUR, PKR, GBP.
Balance used for interest calculations (excluding unposted interest).
Nominal annual rate. Negative rates are supported.
Whole years in the projection horizon.
Adds months to the term without rounding to years.
Used only when daily accrual is selected.
How often interest is calculated and accumulated (not posted).
How often accrued interest is posted to principal.
Use negative values to model regular withdrawals.
When deposits/withdrawals occur across the term.
Assumption: capitalization posts before end-timed contributions at the same boundary.
Rounding affects displayed values in summary and schedule.
If unchecked, unposted interest stays separate from principal.
Results will appear above this form.
Formula used
This calculator separates accrual (interest calculated and tracked) from capitalization (interest posted into principal).
  • Interest for a small time slice: I = B × r × Δt, where B is principal balance, r is annual rate (decimal), and Δt is fraction of a year.
  • Accrued interest bucket: interest is added to an accrued total until a posting date.
  • Capitalization (posting): on each posting boundary, B := B + AccruedInterest, then accrued resets to zero.
  • Effective annual rate estimate (based on posting frequency): EAR = (1 + r/m)^m − 1, where m is postings per year.
How to use this calculator
  1. Enter your starting principal and annual interest rate.
  2. Choose how often interest is accrued and how often it is posted into principal.
  3. Add a recurring deposit or withdrawal and select its frequency and timing.
  4. Click Calculate to view the summary and capitalization schedule.
  5. Use Download CSV or Download PDF to export the schedule table.
Example data table
This is a sample scenario (not tied to your inputs) to illustrate typical fields.
Scenario Principal Annual Rate Accrual Posting Contribution Term
Starter savings plan USD 10,000.00 8.50% Daily Monthly USD 100.00 / month (begin) 3.00 years
Quarterly posting, no deposits USD 25,000.00 6.25% Monthly Quarterly USD 0.00 2.50 years
Debt balance with withdrawals USD 7,500.00 12.00% Weekly Monthly USD -50.00 / week (end) 1.00 years
Tip: For loans, a negative contribution can approximate regular principal reduction when payments are not modeled separately.

Capitalization Mechanics

Interest capitalization moves accumulated interest into principal on posting dates. For example, a 10,000 balance at 8.50% accrues about 70.83 in one month (10,000×0.085÷12). When posted monthly, the next month’s interest is calculated on 10,070.83, increasing growth without changing the stated rate. In loan accounting, this same step increases the outstanding principal and can raise future interest expense.

Frequency Impact

Posting frequency changes the effective annual rate. With an 8.50% nominal rate, monthly posting yields an effective rate near 8.83%, while annual posting stays at 8.50%. Quarterly posting typically lands between those values. Over three years, monthly posting creates 36 posting events, so interest is added to principal earlier and more often, strengthening compounding.

Contribution Sensitivity

Recurring deposits amplify compounding because each contribution earns interest after it arrives. A 100 monthly deposit beginning-of-period adds 1,200 per year to principal flow. At 8.50% with monthly posting, the contribution stream alone can generate roughly 150–250 interest in year one, then more as the base grows. If deposits occur at period end, the first year interest can be lower because each deposit starts earning later.

Accrual Versus Posting

Accrual frequency controls how precisely interest is tracked between posting dates. Daily accrual with monthly posting accumulates interest smoothly, then posts it in a lump. Weekly accrual produces slightly different interim totals, especially under a 360-day convention. The model computes interest per slice using I = B×r×Δt, where Δt matches the chosen accrual cadence.

Reading the Schedule

Each schedule row is a posting event with start balance, contributions inside the period, accrued interest, and end balance. Use the time column to align rows with your budgeting cycle and to spot boundary effects. “Interest accrued” is the total earned since the prior posting, while “posted” is the portion capitalized on that row. If you disable end-of-term posting, any remaining accrued interest stays separate from principal for reporting. Adjust rounding to four decimals when auditing, then switch to two decimals for presentation and exports later.

FAQs

What is interest capitalization?

It is the posting of accrued interest into the principal balance. After posting, future interest is calculated on the higher principal, which can accelerate growth or increase loan costs.

How is this different from compounding?

Compounding describes interest earning interest. Capitalization is the accounting event that moves accrued interest into principal, enabling that compounding to occur under your chosen posting schedule.

What does accrual frequency change?

It changes how often interest is calculated and accumulated between postings. Higher accrual frequency improves precision for partial periods and boundary timing, while capitalization frequency controls when that accrued amount becomes part of principal.

Why does contribution timing matter?

Beginning-of-period contributions start earning interest immediately within the period. End-of-period contributions earn interest starting next period, so totals can be slightly lower over the same term, especially with frequent posting.

What happens if I disable end-of-term posting?

The calculator will stop posting any remaining accrued interest at maturity. Your schedule will show the last posted balance, while the unposted interest remains separate for reporting or reconciliation.

Can I model withdrawals or negative rates?

Yes. Enter a negative contribution to represent regular withdrawals, and the model will reduce principal accordingly. Negative interest rates are also allowed, producing negative accrued interest and lower balances over time.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.