FD Calculator

Return Rate For Populer Banks below ⬇



7.1%


3 Yrs


Principal Amount

₹1,00,000

Interest Earned

₹0

Maturity Amount

₹0

Year Opening Interest Closing

What You Can Buy with ₹0

💰 Sample FD Calculation
Example: ₹1,00,000 invested for 5 years at 7.5% p.a. (quarterly compounding)
💵
₹1,00,000
Principal Invested
📈
₹44,995
Interest Earned
🏦
₹1,44,995
Maturity Amount
📊
7.71%
Effective Annual Yield
Principal (68.97%)Interest (31.03%)
Year 1 Growth+₹7,714
Year 3 Growth+₹25,023
Year 5 (Maturity)+₹44,995
🛒 What Can ₹1,44,995 Actually Buy You?
Putting your FD maturity amount in real-world perspective — based on the example above
📱

Smartphones

≈ 3–4 phones
Buy 3–4 mid-range Android phones (₹35,000–₹45,000 each)
💻

Laptop

≈ 1 good laptop
A solid work laptop with ₹10,000–₹15,000 to spare
✈️

International Trip

Budget trip for 1
Budget Southeast Asia trip (Thailand/Vietnam) for 2 weeks
🛵

Scooter

≈ 1 scooter
A new Honda Activa or similar two-wheeler (on-road)
📚

Online Courses

≈ 10–15 courses
Premium Udemy, Coursera, or Skillshare courses for skill-building
🍽️

Restaurant Dinners

≈ 70–100 dinners
Fine dining for two at ₹1,500–₹2,000 per meal across 35–50 outings
🏠

Rent Payment

≈ 5–6 months rent
Covers 5–6 months of ₹25,000/month apartment rent
💍

Jewellery

≈ 5–6 grams gold
Approx 5–6g of 22k gold jewellery at current market rates
🎓

Education EMI

1 semester fees
One semester of a private engineering or MBA college
🔄

Reinvest the FD

₹1,44,995 → ₹2,10,174
Reinvest at 7.5% for 5 more years and get ₹65,179 more!

💡 The reinvestment insight: The most valuable thing your FD maturity can "buy" is another FD — or an equity mutual fund. Compounding means your ₹44,995 in interest can now earn its own interest. This is how wealth compounds across generations.

🚀 How to Use the FD Calculator
Get your complete FD maturity calculation in seconds
1

Enter Your Principal Amount

Type the amount you want to invest in the FD — e.g. ₹50,000, ₹1,00,000, or ₹5,00,000. There is no upper limit in the calculator.

2

Set the Interest Rate

Enter the annual interest rate offered by your bank (e.g. 7.0%, 7.5%, 8.0%). You can compare different rates by adjusting the slider.

3

Choose Tenure

Select the FD duration in months or years. Common tenures: 1 year, 2 years, 3 years, 5 years. Banks often offer better rates for specific tenures — check before locking in.

4

Select Compounding Frequency

Choose how often interest compounds: Monthly, Quarterly (most common for Indian FDs), Half-yearly, or Annually. More frequent compounding = higher effective yield.

5

View Results & Real-World Value

See principal, interest earned, maturity amount, effective annual yield, year-by-year growth chart, tax deduction (TDS), and the "What Can You Buy?" panel that puts your returns in perspective.

📊 FD Growth at Different Rates — ₹1,00,000 for 5 Years
See how much difference the interest rate makes over time (quarterly compounding)
Interest RateMaturity AmountInterest EarnedGain %Typical Bank
6.0% p.a.₹1,34,686+₹34,68634.7%Large PSU banks
6.5% p.a.₹1,37,851+₹37,85137.9%SBI, Bank of Baroda
7.0% p.a.₹1,41,478+₹41,47841.5%HDFC Bank, Axis Bank
7.5% p.a.₹1,44,995+₹44,99545.0%ICICI Bank, Kotak
8.0% p.a.₹1,48,886+₹48,88648.9%Small Finance Banks
8.5% p.a.₹1,51,742+₹51,74251.7%Ujjivan, Jana SFB
9.0% p.a.₹1,55,717+₹55,71755.7%NBFC / Corporate FD

⚠️ Higher rates from NBFCs and small finance banks carry higher risk. Only invest amounts within DICGC insurance coverage (₹5 lakh per bank per depositor) for capital protection.

🏦 Current FD Rates — Popular Banks (India)
Indicative rates for 1–3 year FD (check bank website for latest rates before investing)

🏦 SBIPSU

6.80%
1–2 years tenure
Senior citizen: +0.50%

🏦 HDFC BankPrivate

7.00%
15 months – 2 years
Senior citizen: +0.50%

🏦 ICICI BankPrivate

7.00%
390 days – 2 years
Senior citizen: +0.50%

🏦 Axis BankPrivate

7.10%
1–2 years tenure
Senior citizen: +0.50%

🏦 Kotak BankPrivate

7.10%
390 days – 2 years
Senior citizen: +0.40%

🏦 Ujjivan SFBSmall Finance

8.25%
12–24 months
Senior citizen: +0.50%

🏦 Jana SFBSmall Finance

8.50%
1–2 years
Senior citizen: +0.50%

🏦 Post Office TDGovt.

7.50%
5-year TD (tax saving)
Section 80C benefit

Rates are indicative and subject to change. Always check the official bank website for current rates before investing.

✨ Pro Tips for FD Investors
🪜

FD Laddering

Instead of one big FD, split into 3–5 FDs maturing at different intervals (1yr, 2yr, 3yr, 5yr). When each matures, reinvest at the best rate available — ensures liquidity without penalty.

👴

Senior Citizen Bonus

Most banks offer 0.25–0.75% extra interest for customers aged 60+. If investing for a parent or grandparent, book the FD in their name for significantly higher effective returns.

💸

TDS on FD Interest

Banks deduct 10% TDS if annual interest exceeds ₹40,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens). Submit Form 15G/15H if your income is below the tax slab to avoid TDS deduction.

📅

Reinvest at Maturity

Set an auto-renew reminder 30 days before maturity. Don't let FD auto-renew at default rates — shop around and move to the bank offering the best rate at that time.

🏦

DICGC Insurance

Bank deposits are insured up to ₹5 lakh per bank per depositor by DICGC. If investing more than ₹5 lakh, spread across multiple banks — not multiple branches of the same bank.

📊

Quarterly vs Annual

Quarterly compounding gives a higher effective yield than annual. For a 7.5% nominal rate: annual compounding yields 7.5%, quarterly yields 7.71%. Always prefer quarterly compounding.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Fixed Deposit (FD)? +
A Fixed Deposit is a financial instrument offered by banks and NBFCs where you deposit a lump sum for a fixed period at a predetermined interest rate. Unlike savings accounts, the rate is locked in for the tenure — so you know exactly how much you'll earn. FDs are one of the safest investments in India as bank deposits are insured up to ₹5 lakh by the DICGC.
What is the difference between simple and compound interest in FDs? +
Simple interest pays a fixed amount each period based only on the principal. Compound interest pays interest on the principal PLUS previously earned interest — interest earns interest. Most Indian bank FDs compound quarterly. A ₹1 lakh FD at 7.5% for 5 years: simple interest gives ₹37,500; quarterly compound interest gives ₹44,995 — a ₹7,495 difference purely from compounding.
Is FD interest taxable in India? +
Yes — FD interest is fully taxable as "Income from Other Sources" at your applicable income tax slab rate (5%, 20%, or 30%). Banks deduct 10% TDS when annual interest exceeds ₹40,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens). Submit Form 15G (below 60 years) or 15H (60+ years) to avoid TDS if your total income is below the taxable limit. Always include FD interest when filing your ITR.
Can I break my FD before maturity? +
Yes, most FDs can be prematurely broken (pre-closed) but with a penalty — typically 0.5%–1% lower interest rate than the contracted rate. For example, if your FD rate is 7.5% and you break it early, you may receive only 6.5%–7%. Some banks waive the penalty for medical emergencies. Alternatively, take an overdraft loan against your FD (usually at FD rate + 1–2%) to avoid breaking it.
What is an FD ladder strategy and why does it help? +
Laddering means splitting your investment across multiple FDs with staggered maturity dates instead of one large FD. Example: ₹1 lakh total split into four ₹25,000 FDs maturing in 1, 2, 3, and 5 years. Benefits: you always have an FD maturing soon for liquidity; you avoid locking the entire amount at a potentially unfavorable rate; when each FD matures, you reinvest at the current best rate.
Is it better to invest in FD or Mutual Funds? +
FDs offer guaranteed, predictable returns with capital protection (safe but lower returns of 6–9%). Mutual funds offer potentially higher returns (12–15%+ historically for equity funds) but carry market risk — returns are not guaranteed and can be negative in bad years. The right choice depends on your risk tolerance, time horizon, and goals. Many financial advisors recommend FDs for emergency funds and short-term goals (1–3 years), and equity mutual funds for long-term wealth building (5+ years).
📐 FD Calculation Formulas
The math behind your FD returns
📐

Simple Interest

I = P × R × T / 100
P = Principal, R = Rate %, T = Years

Maturity = P + I

📈

Compound Interest

A = P × (1 + R/N)^(N×T)
N = Compounding times/year
Quarterly: N = 4

Interest = A − P

📊

Effective Annual Rate

EAR = (1 + R/N)^N − 1
7.5% quarterly compounding:
EAR = (1 + 0.075/4)^4 − 1
= 7.713%

💸

After-Tax Return

Net = Maturity − Tax
Tax = Interest × Slab Rate
For 20% slab: keep 80%
of interest earned

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