Plain definition
A return or balance line on a screen is bundled with timing, fees, and tax location. Name those pieces or the figure can mislead you.
For compound growth, start from Compound Growth, then tie the words to one related lesson so you see how practitioners use the same term differently.
What people mix up
When two articles disagree on strategy, they often assume different horizons or fee levels. Sync those before you debate.
Cross-check Related lesson and Another angle—if both narratives fit your numbers after you align inputs, you are ready to decide.
Check your numbers now
One sentence
Write “This return is after ___ fees, before ___ taxes, from ___ to ___.” Empty blanks mean the definition is still loose.
Compare
| Casual use | Careful use |
|---|---|
| “High return” | After fees, stated horizon, and tax location |
| “Safe” | Matches date you need liquidity |
| “Beats the market” | Same index, same period, same currency |
Name horizon, fees, and account type Then quote return
Your numbers
Core lesson
Go deeper: Compound Growth — if one number still does not feel right, enter it in the calculators above and change one input at a time to see what drives the result.
Use the calculator
FAQ
- Where is the main lesson?
Compound Growth is the hub with related lessons linked from it.
- Which calculator should I open first?
Use Investment growth or Lump sum growth for long horizons; Savings goal for targets; Debt payoff when comparing to loans.