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Canada · 2025

Index Fund Calculator

Project index fund investment growth with lump sum and regular contributions. See long-term compound returns.

Last reviewed: 10 February 2026Source: FCA — Investment basicsUpdated every: tax year
Index Fund Calculator · CAInvestments & Savings

Rates & sources

Compound growth assumes reinvested returns and no platform fees. Past performance is not a guide to future returns.

Source: FCA — Investment basics — figures refreshed at the start of each tax year.

When to use this calculator

  • Before choosing between saving, investing, or increasing your monthly contribution.
  • When you want to compare best-case, base-case, and cautious return assumptions.
  • When you need a quick projection before making a longer-term portfolio decision.
  • When you are deciding how many more years of contributions are needed to reach a specific target balance.
  • When you want to see whether starting earlier versus contributing more each month produces a bigger outcome.

A realistic Canada planning example

Use these sample inputs as a quick scenario test, then change one variable at a time to compare outcomes.

Initial Investment (CA$)

CA$15,000

Monthly Contribution (CA$)

CA$250 per month

Expected Annual Return (%)

8

Years

10 years

After entering these figures, review portfolio value, total invested and growth together rather than in isolation — each metric tells a different part of the story. Then rerun the tool with one input adjusted to see which variable has the biggest effect on all three outputs before you settle on a plan.

How to read your results

Portfolio Value

Use this metric to compare scenarios side by side and understand how changes in the key inputs drive the final outcome. If the figure surprises you, isolate one variable at a time and rerun the calculation to identify which assumption is responsible.

Total Invested

This is the headline outcome of the calculation, but it is most useful when read alongside the supporting metrics below it rather than in isolation. Try changing one input at a time and watching how this total moves to understand which driver has the biggest impact.

Growth

Use this metric to compare scenarios side by side and understand how changes in the key inputs drive the final outcome. If the figure surprises you, isolate one variable at a time and rerun the calculation to identify which assumption is responsible.

Method & assumptionsAuthoritative sources

This calculator models the growth of index fund investments by applying a net annual return to a starting lump sum and regular contributions. The return rate you enter should reflect expected market growth minus the fund's Ongoing Charges Figure (OCF) and your platform fee — this gives a realistic net return rather than a gross headline figure.

The calculator assumes reinvestment of all dividends and a constant annual growth rate. In practice, index fund returns fluctuate significantly year to year. Many UK financial planners use 5–7% annually as a long-term real return assumption for global equity index funds, though past performance is not a guarantee of future results. The model does not account for tax on dividends or capital gains above annual allowances if held outside an ISA or SIPP wrapper. Holding index funds within an ISA or SIPP eliminates most ongoing UK tax considerations.

Common mistakes

  • !Assuming a constant return without checking a more conservative growth rate.
  • !Forgetting to include ongoing contributions, fees, or tax wrappers where relevant.
  • !Focusing only on the final balance instead of the path required to reach it.
  • !Ignoring the drag of platform fees or fund charges, which can reduce the real compounded return significantly over ten or more years.
  • !Comparing ISA and general investment account projections without adjusting for the tax treatment of interest, dividends, or capital gains.

What to do next

  • Test a cautious, expected, and optimistic growth rate instead of relying on a single projection.
  • Compare this result with related savings or retirement tools before committing more money.
  • Use the linked guides to understand which assumptions matter most over longer periods.
  • Consider running the same figures in an ISA and a general account scenario to see how the tax treatment changes the outcome over ten or more years.
  • If the projected balance falls short of your target, use the tool to work backwards — increase the monthly contribution until the result meets your goal.

Frequently asked

Global equity index funds have historically returned around 7–10% per year over long periods (20+ years), though past performance does not guarantee future results.

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