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19 votes
You deposit $6000 In an account earning 3% interest compounded monthly. How much will you have in the account in 10 years?

You deposit $6000 In an account earning 3% interest compounded monthly. How much will-example-1
User Aashir
by
2.6k points

1 Answer

17 votes
17 votes

After 10 years, you will have approximately $8099.15 in the account.

To solve this problem

We can use the compound interest formula:


A = P * (1 + r/n)^(^n^t^)

Where:

  • A is the future value of the investment/loan, including interest
  • P is the principal amount (the initial deposit or loan amount)
  • r is the annual interest rate (decimal)
  • n is the number of times that interest is compounded per year
  • t is the time the money is invested or borrowed for, in years

In this case:

P = $6000

r = 0.03 (3% as a decimal)

n = 12 (compounded monthly)

t = 10 years

Substitute these values into the formula:


A = 6000 * (1 + 0.03/12)^(^1^2^*^1^0)

Now, calculate this expression:

A ≈
6000 * (1.0025)^(^1^2^0)

A ≈ 6000 * 1.349858807

A ≈ $8099.15

Therefore, after 10 years, you will have approximately $8099.15 in the account.

User TheBosti
by
3.2k points
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