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Savings Goal Calculator

Monthly contribution needed to reach a savings goal in your target timeframe with interest. Free financial calculator for savings goal. AU (ATO/GST) and US (IRS) ...

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A 28-year-old is saving for a house deposit of $120,000 and already has $35,000. They want to know two things: how long to reach the target saving $1,500 a month, and what monthly amount they need to reach it in exactly 3 years.

Savings Goal Calculator
Savings
With regular monthly savings and compound interest, your money grows faster than most people expect. Even a 5% savings rate on your balance adds meaningfully over 2–3 years.
ℹ️ Results are estimates for planning purposes. Verify with current standards and a qualified professional.

1 What this calculator does

Runs in two modes. Time mode: enter savings target, current savings, monthly amount and interest rate to find how many months to reach the goal. Amount mode: enter target and deadline in months to find the required monthly savings. Includes interest earned on existing savings.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Time mode (months to goal): Remaining = Target - Current savings If rate=0: Months = Ceiling(Remaining / Monthly amount) If rate>0: Months = Ceiling[log(1 + Remaining x r / Monthly) / log(1 + r)] where r = monthly rate Amount mode (required monthly saving): If rate=0: Monthly = Remaining / Months If rate>0: Monthly = Remaining x r / [(1+r)^Months - 1]

When interest is earned, compounding means each month's savings accumulate interest alongside the balance. The time mode formula is the inverse of the future value of an annuity -- solving for n (number of periods) rather than the future value. The amount mode solves for the regular payment (annuity payment) needed to reach a target future value in a set number of periods. Both assume interest is credited monthly.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
How long to save $120,000 -- no interest
Given: Target: $120,000 | Current savings: $35,000 | Monthly: $1,500 | Rate: 0%
Working: Remaining: $120,000 - $35,000 = $85,000 | Months: ceiling(85,000/1,500) = ceiling(56.67)
Answer: 57 months -- just under 5 years
💡 Without interest, straightforward division. To reach the goal in 4 years (48 months): need $85,000/48 = $1,771/month.
Standard
How long with 4.5% interest (HISA)
Given: Target: $120,000 | Current: $35,000 | Monthly: $1,500 | Rate: 4.5% p.a.
Working: r = 0.045/12 = 0.00375 | Remaining: $85,000 | Months: ceil[log(1+(85,000x0.00375)/1,500)/log(1.00375)] = ceil[log(1.2125)/log(1.00375)]
Answer: Approximately 53 months -- saves about 4 months vs no interest
💡 Interest saves 4 months on a 4-year savings plan. Not transformative, but on a $35,000 existing balance, interest earned in year 1 alone is approximately $1,575.
Advanced
Required monthly amount -- 3-year deadline
Given: Target: $120,000 | Current: $35,000 | Months: 36 | Rate: 4.5% p.a.
Working: r = 0.00375 | Remaining: $85,000 | Monthly = 85,000 x 0.00375 / [(1.00375)^36 - 1] = 318.75 / [1.1445-1] = 318.75 / 0.1445
Answer: Required monthly: approximately $2,206/month
💡 To reach the target in 3 years requires $2,206/month vs $1,500 to reach it in just under 5. The tradeoff: 2 years shorter saves 2 years of rent but requires $706/month more in savings.

4 Sanity check

High interest savings accounts 2024
Online savings: 4.5-5.5% p.a. | Term deposits 12 months: 5.0-5.5% | At-call savings: 4.0-5.0%
Use a realistic market rate for the savings vehicle you are actually using.
Interest on existing balance
$35,000 at 5% earns $1,750 in year 1 -- equivalent to 1.2 extra months of savings
The larger the existing balance, the more meaningful the interest return.
First Home Super Saver Scheme
AU first home buyers can save up to $50,000 through super and withdraw it as a deposit | Taxed at marginal rate minus 30%
FHSS can significantly speed up deposit accumulation for tax purposes.
Goal inflation
Property prices rising faster than savings rate effectively increases the required target over time

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Using a nominal return rate without considering inflation Savings goal is to buy a property whose price may increase faster than the savings rate Goal appears achievable but the property is more expensive by the time the target is reached For property deposit goals, model the deposit as a moving target. If property prices grow at 5% and savings earn 4.5%, the deposit required grows faster than savings accumulate.
Not accounting for automatic tax on savings account interest Using gross interest rate without tax impact Effective after-tax return is lower than the nominal rate Savings account interest is taxable income in Australia. At 32.5% marginal rate, 5% gross return = 3.38% after-tax return. Use the after-tax rate for accurate projections.
Setting a monthly savings target without a buffer for irregular expenses Assuming perfect monthly savings discipline Falling behind target every quarter when car registration, rates, vet bills arrive Build in a 5-10% buffer below your maximum monthly savings capacity. Use the amount mode to calculate the required amount, then set the direct debit for 10% more than that as the target pace.
Treating the savings goal as fixed without adjusting as circumstances change Setting and forgetting the savings plan A salary increase or windfall could have accelerated the goal significantly Recalculate the timeline whenever income or expenses change significantly. A pay rise that allows an extra $300/month may cut the timeline by 4-6 months.