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Savings Calculator | Canada
Use the savings calculator when the practical problem is not whether you should save, but how quickly a target becomes realistic once contributions, rate assumptions, and time are visible together. It is most useful when you are deciding between saving more each month, extending the time horizon, or choosing between cash saving and investing.
Interpretation
What your result means
Use the notes below to understand the main figures in your result and when this calculator is most useful.
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.
Result
Use this metric to compare scenarios side by side and understand how the key drivers affect the final outcome.
Next steps
What to do next
Continue with the most relevant next step based on your result.
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Example
Example: building a medium-term savings target
A realistic example to help you understand how the numbers fit together.
Starting balance
CA$5,000
Monthly contribution
CA$350
Savings rate
4.5%
Target period
5 years
The value of this example is seeing what comes from your own contributions versus the interest earned. That split is often what makes the next decision clearer.
Avoid mistakes
Common mistakes
A few things that often lead to misleading or incomplete results.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Helpful answers to common questions about this calculator.
How much should I save each month in the UK?
A common guideline is to save at least 20% of your take-home pay. However, any amount saved regularly is beneficial. Start with what you can afford and increase contributions over time.
What is the best way to save money in the UK?
ISAs (Individual Savings Accounts) are the most tax-efficient way to save in the UK, with a £20,000 annual allowance. Cash ISAs suit short-term goals, while Stocks and Shares ISAs are better for long-term growth.
How does compound interest boost my savings?
Compound interest means you earn interest on both your deposits and previously earned interest. Over many years, this snowball effect can significantly increase your total savings beyond your contributions alone.
What interest rate should I expect on UK savings accounts?
UK savings rates vary with the Bank of England base rate. Compare accounts using the AER (Annual Equivalent Rate) and consider fixed-rate bonds for higher rates if you can lock away your money.
Should I save or pay off debt first?
Generally, prioritise paying off high-interest debt (credit cards, overdrafts) before building savings, as debt interest usually exceeds savings interest. Keep a small emergency fund while paying down debt.
Related
Related calculators
Savings Growth Calculator
Project your savings with regular monthly contributions and compound interest.
Compound Interest Calculator
Calculate how your investment grows with compound interest over time.
Retirement Savings Calculator
Calculate how much you will have at retirement based on your savings and contributions.
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