Depending on the terms of your investment, when interest is paid out, it may be added to the overall sum you have invested. This gives the interest the opportunity to compound, which basically means you earn interest on that interest.
For example
You invest $10,000 in a product that offers a fixed return of 4% per year (for the purposes of this example, calculated annually, and after fees and tax). At the end of the year, you will receive $400 in interest – 4% of $10,000.
You keep in the entire $10,400 in the investment. At the end of the second year, you receive $416. That is 4% on your original investment, and also 4% on the interest you earned last year – for a total of $10,816. That $16 is compound interest.
Compound interest is for the long term
An extra $16 doesn’t sound like much. But the real value of compound interest is over the long term.
If you kept the above example invested for 10 years, by the end you would have $14,802 – your original $10,000, $4000 from interest, and $802 from interest on the interest.
Now imagine you made additional contributions to the investment each month or year, or kept the money invested for even longer (the amount of time you might save for retirement, for example). You can start to get an idea of how the increases grow.
Here’s an example for visual learners: