
The Rule of 72: Calculate How Long It Takes for Your Money to Double
The Rule of 72 is a simple and powerful mental tool. Divide 72 by the rate of return to find out how many years it takes for your capital to double.
The Most Useful Formula in Personal Finance
The Rule of 72 is elegant in its simplicity: divide 72 by the annual rate of return to get the number of years it takes for your capital to double.
Concrete Examples
- Livret A at 3%: 72 / 3 = 24 years to double your money
- Assurance-vie fonds euros at 3.5%: 72 / 3.5 = 20.5 years
- PEA invested in stocks at 7%: 72 / 7 = 10.3 years
- Dynamic portfolio at 10%: 72 / 10 = 7.2 years
Why Compound Interest Is So Powerful
Albert Einstein reportedly called compound interest the "8th wonder of the world." The reason: your gains themselves generate gains. It's the snowball effect.
A Telling Example
10,000 euros invested at 7% per year:
- After 10 years: 19,672 euros
- After 20 years: 38,697 euros
- After 30 years: 76,123 euros
The initial capital was multiplied by 7.6 in 30 years, without adding a single additional euro.
The Impact of Time: Starting Early
The difference between starting to invest at 25 and at 35 is colossal. 100 euros per month at 7% return:
- From 25 to 65 years old (40 years): 264,012 euros
- From 35 to 65 years old (30 years): 122,709 euros
10 years delay = 141,303 euros in lost earnings. Time is your best ally.
Practical Application
Use this rule to quickly evaluate any investment. If a salesperson promises you a doubling in 5 years, this implies a return of 72/5 = 14.4% per year. Possible, but risky.
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