Albert Einstein reportedly called compound interest the eighth wonder of the world. Whether he actually said it is debatable — but the math is not. Compounding is the reason a 22-year-old investing ₹5,000 per month ends up wealthier at 55 than a 32-year-old investing ₹15,000 per month. It rewards patience more than it rewards amount, and it punishes delay more than it punishes poor stock-picking.
This guide explains compounding with real Indian numbers, not abstract theory.
What compounding actually is
Simple interest: you earn returns only on your original investment. Compound interest: you earn returns on your original investment plus on all the returns that have already accumulated. The returns themselves generate returns.
A ₹1,00,000 investment at 12% simple interest earns ₹12,000 every year — ₹2,40,000 total interest over 20 years. The same ₹1,00,000 at 12% compounded annually grows to ₹9,64,629 — ₹8,64,629 in interest. The difference? ₹6,24,629. That's the compounding premium — returns earned on returns.
The Rule of 72 — mental math for doubling time
Divide 72 by the annual return rate to get the approximate number of years for your money to double:
- FD at 7%: 72 / 7 = ~10.3 years to double
- Equity at 12%: 72 / 12 = 6 years to double
- Equity at 15%: 72 / 15 = 4.8 years to double
- Savings account at 3.5%: 72 / 3.5 = ~20.6 years to double
At 12% CAGR, your money doubles roughly every 6 years. Over a 30-year investing career, that's 5 doublings: ₹1L → ₹2L → ₹4L → ₹8L → ₹16L → ₹32L. The last doubling (from ₹16L to ₹32L) adds more wealth than the first four doublings combined. This is the non-intuitive heart of compounding — the back-end does all the heavy lifting.
The snowball analogy
Imagine rolling a snowball down a long hill. At the top, it's tiny and collects snow slowly. Halfway down, it's mid-sized and collecting faster. At the bottom, it's massive and each revolution adds more snow than the entire first half of the hill. The snowball didn't get “better” at collecting snow — it just got bigger. More surface area = more collection per revolution.
Your investment portfolio works the same way. At ₹5 lakh, a 12% return adds ₹60,000. At ₹50 lakh, the same 12% adds ₹6 lakh. Same percentage, wildly different absolute rupees. The snowball just needs time and a long enough hill.
₹5,000/month SIP at 12%: the 10/20/30 year breakdown
Let's use the most common Indian SIP scenario: ₹5,000 per month in an equity mutual fund returning 12% CAGR (roughly what Nifty 50 has delivered historically over 15+ year periods):
After 10 years
- Total invested: ₹6,00,000 (₹5,000 x 120 months)
- Corpus value: ~₹11,61,695
- Wealth gain: ~₹5,61,695
- Returns as % of invested: 94%
After 20 years
- Total invested: ₹12,00,000
- Corpus value: ~₹49,95,740
- Wealth gain: ~₹37,95,740
- Returns as % of invested: 316%
After 30 years
- Total invested: ₹18,00,000
- Corpus value: ~₹1,76,49,569
- Wealth gain: ~₹1,58,49,569
- Returns as % of invested: 880%
Notice the pattern: investing ₹6L more in years 21-30 (compared to years 1-10) adds ₹1,26,53,874 in corpus growth. The last decade does the heavy lifting precisely because the snowball is now enormous. This is why “time in the market” beats “timing the market” every single time.
Why starting early crushes investing more
Consider two investors:
- Priya (age 25): Starts SIP of ₹5,000/month at age 25. Stops at 35 (10 years). Never invests another rupee. Total invested: ₹6,00,000.
- Arjun (age 35): Starts SIP of ₹5,000/month at age 35. Continues until age 55 (20 years). Total invested: ₹12,00,000.
At age 55, assuming 12% CAGR throughout:
- Priya's corpus: ~₹11.6L grows untouched for 20 more years at 12% = ~₹1,11,98,000. She invested ₹6L and has ₹1.12 crore.
- Arjun's corpus: ~₹49,96,000. He invested ₹12L (double Priya) and has less than half her corpus.
Priya invested half the money, for half the duration, and ended up with more than double the corpus. The only difference: she started 10 years earlier. Those first 10 years gave her snowball a 20-year runway to compound. Arjun's snowball only had the runway from his own contributions.
Compounding frequency matters
How often returns compound affects the final number:
- Annual compounding (₹1L at 12%): After 10 years = ₹3,10,585
- Quarterly compounding (same): After 10 years = ₹3,26,204
- Monthly compounding (same): After 10 years = ₹3,30,039
- Daily compounding (same): After 10 years = ₹3,31,946
The difference between annual and daily compounding over 10 years on ₹1L is about ₹21,361. Not transformative at small amounts, but at ₹50L+ it becomes meaningful. FDs compound quarterly. PPF compounds annually. Equity mutual fund NAVs compound daily (NAV reflects daily returns). This is one under-discussed reason equities have a structural compounding advantage over annual-compounding instruments.
Compounding across Indian asset classes
Real returns of ₹10 lakh invested across asset classes over 20 years (approximate historical data):
Equity (Nifty 50): ~12% CAGR
- ₹10L → ~₹96.5L after 20 years
- Post-LTCG tax (12.5% above ₹1.25L exemption): ~₹85-86L
- Real return (inflation-adjusted at 6%): ~₹30L in today's purchasing power
Fixed Deposit: ~7% CAGR
- ₹10L → ~₹38.7L after 20 years (pre-tax)
- Post-income-tax (30% slab): ~₹23.9L
- Real return: ~₹7.4L in today's purchasing power
Gold: ~10% CAGR (India, INR terms)
- ₹10L → ~₹67.3L after 20 years
- Post-LTCG tax (12.5% after 2024 budget): ~₹59L
- Real return: ~₹18.4L in today's purchasing power
Real estate (metro, residential): ~8-9% CAGR
- ₹10L → ~₹46.6L after 20 years (at 8%)
- Plus rental yield: ~2-3% annually, partially offsetting maintenance
- Illiquidity, maintenance, and transaction costs (stamp duty, brokerage) eat 5-10%
- Real return: ~₹10-12L after all costs
Savings account: ~3.5% CAGR
- ₹10L → ~₹19.9L after 20 years (pre-tax)
- Post-tax and after inflation: real wealth actually declines
- Savings accounts lose purchasing power over long periods
The key insight: equity doesn't just beat other asset classes by a small margin. The compounding difference between 12% and 7% over 20 years turns a 2.5x gap in corpus into a 4x gap after tax adjustment. That's the exponential nature of compounding — small differences in rate create massive differences in outcome over long horizons.
The enemies of compounding
Compounding works in your favour only if you let it run uninterrupted. Four things destroy the compounding chain:
- Withdrawing early: Breaking an FD or redeeming a SIP after 3 years doesn't give compounding enough runway. The exponential curve is flat in the early years — the magic happens after year 10-15.
- Inflation: At 6% inflation, your money needs to double every 12 years just to maintain purchasing power. A savings account at 3.5% compounds slower than inflation erodes — you're losing wealth while feeling like you're saving.
- Taxes: Every time you book gains and pay tax, you reduce the base that compounds forward. This is why tax-efficient investing (holding > 1 year for LTCG, using ELSS for 80C, tax-loss harvesting) isn't optional — it's a compounding multiplier.
- Fees and expense ratios: A mutual fund with 2% expense ratio vs 0.1% index fund means you lose 1.9% annually to fees. Over 30 years at 12% gross returns, the index fund grows ₹1L to ₹29.96L; the active fund grows it to ₹17.45L. You gave up ₹12.5L in compounding benefit to fund management fees.
The exponential curve — why our brains fail us
Human brains think linearly. If you invest ₹5,000/month and get ₹5.6L return in 10 years, your brain predicts ₹11.2L in 20 years (2x the time = 2x the return). The actual number is ₹37.9L. And for 30 years, your brain predicts ₹16.8L. The actual number is ₹1.58 crore.
This is the exponential curve problem. We systematically underestimate the power of compounding at long durations because our mental model is linear. The fix is simple: run the numbers in a SIP calculator and let the math override your intuition.
Practical compounding checklist for Indian investors
- Start now, not next month. Every month of delay costs more than you think. Even ₹500/month is better than ₹0 while you wait for “the right time.”
- Automate your SIP. Compounding requires consistency. Manual investing invites skipped months. Set up auto-debit and forget it exists.
- Use low-cost vehicles. Index funds with 0.1-0.2% expense ratio let more of the return compound for you instead of the fund house.
- Increase your SIP annually. A step-up SIP (increasing by 10% each year) dramatically accelerates compounding. Use the step-up SIP calculator to see the difference.
- Don't interrupt the chain. Avoid redeeming equity investments before 7-10 years. Every early redemption resets the compounding clock.
- Reinvest dividends. Choose growth option in mutual funds, not IDCW (dividend). Dividend payout breaks the compounding chain and triggers tax.
- Be tax-efficient. Hold equity > 1 year for LTCG benefit. Use ELSS for 80C. Harvest tax losses annually to offset gains.
Compounding doesn't require genius stock-picking, market timing, or financial sophistication. It requires exactly three things: starting early, staying consistent, and not interrupting the process. The math does the rest.