MoneyCalcKit helps you estimate loans, savings, salary, taxes, budgets, and investments using standard financial formulas. All 19 calculators run entirely in your browser — instant results, no sign-up, and your calculator inputs stay local.
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19 financial calculators with schedules, worked examples, and export tools. No sign-up, no paywalls, and your calculator inputs stay in your browser. Share MoneyCalcKit with a friend.
Yes, all 19 calculators on MoneyCalcKit are completely free to use. No registration, no account, no credit card required.
Results are estimates based on the values you enter and standard financial formulas. They do not account for taxes, lender-specific rules, fees, market fluctuations, or other variables. Always consult a financial professional before making major decisions.
Yes. Use the currency selector in the top header to switch between 25 currencies including USD, EUR, GBP, INR, JPY, AED, and more. All results will display in your selected currency format.
No. All calculations happen entirely in your browser. No input values, results, or personal data are sent to any server or stored anywhere. MoneyCalcKit has no backend — your numbers stay on your device. Note: this site displays third-party ads (Google AdSense) which may use cookies or similar technologies per their own privacy policies.
Yes — use the Share button after calculating. This creates a link that pre-fills all your input values so the recipient can see the same calculation. Note that the numbers you entered will be visible in the shared link, so only share it if you are comfortable sharing those values.
Financial results depend on many real-world factors that cannot be captured in a single formula — lender-specific fees, variable interest rates, actual tax credits, insurance premiums, and more. MoneyCalcKit uses standard industry formulas to give you a reliable starting estimate. Always verify important decisions with a qualified financial professional.
Yes. After every calculation, use the export row below the result: TXT for a plain-text copy, CSV for the amortization or schedule table, JSON for full calculation data including formula and assumptions, or Report for a branded printable HTML summary.
EMI stands for Equated Monthly Installment. It is the fixed monthly amount paid by a borrower to a lender to repay a loan over a set tenure. It includes both principal repayment and interest charges.
Compound interest is interest calculated on both the initial principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. This means your money grows faster over time compared to simple interest, which is only calculated on the principal.
No. MoneyCalcKit provides estimation tools for informational and educational purposes only. The results are not financial, tax, legal, or investment advice. Please consult a qualified financial advisor for decisions involving significant money.
Guide: Retirement Calculator
What is a Retirement Calculator?
Retirement planning requires estimating how much you need to save to sustain your lifestyle without working. The general guideline is the 4% rule: you can safely withdraw 4% of your portfolio annually without depleting it over 30 years. To generate $4,000/month ($48,000/year), you need a portfolio of $1,200,000.
How to use this calculator
Enter your current age and target retirement age
Enter your monthly savings toward retirement
Enter the expected annual return on your investments
Enter your current retirement savings (401k, IRA, etc.)
Formula: Corpus = Current × (1+r)ⁿ + Monthly × ((1+r)ⁿ−1)/r where n = months to retirement. Monthly Withdrawal = Corpus × 4% ÷ 12.
A common rule: you need 25× your annual expenses. If you spend $60,000/year, aim for $1.5 million. Use the 4% rule as a starting guideline — it assumes a 30-year retirement and a diversified investment portfolio.
Research shows a portfolio invested 60% in stocks and 40% in bonds historically supports withdrawals of 4% annually for 30+ years without depleting the portfolio. It is a conservative starting point — not a guarantee.
Yesterday. The earlier you start, the more compound interest works in your favor. Someone who saves $300/month from age 25 to 65 at 8% accumulates $1.04M. Starting at 35 produces only $448K — less than half, despite saving for only 10 fewer years.
Maximise tax-advantaged accounts first: 401(k) up to $24,500 (2026), IRA up to $7,500 (2026). If your employer offers a match, contribute enough to get the full match first — it is a 50–100% instant return.