CAGR Calculator
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What is CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate)?
CAGR is the rate at which an investment would have grown if it had grown at a steady rate compounded annually. It smooths out volatility and gives you a single annual growth rate, making it easy to compare different investments over the same or different time periods.
Unlike simple average returns, CAGR accounts for the compounding effect. If your mutual fund returned +40%, -20%, +30% in three years, the average return is 16.7%, but the CAGR is only 13.4% — a more accurate picture of actual growth.
CAGR is widely used by financial analysts, mutual fund fact sheets, and investment platforms to report standardized returns. When an AMC says “our fund delivered 15% returns over 10 years,” they’re quoting the CAGR.
CAGR Formula
Where n = number of years. The result is a decimal — multiply by 100 to get a percentage.
CAGR Examples
Example 1: Stock Investment
You bought shares worth ₹1,00,000 in 2020. In 2025, they're worth ₹2,50,000 (5 years).
Your investment grew at a 20.11% CAGR, meaning it compounded at ~20% per year even if individual years varied wildly.
Example 2: Real Estate
Property purchased at ₹50,00,000 in 2015, now worth ₹90,00,000 (10 years).
After accounting for compounding, the property grew at only 6.05% per year — barely beating inflation! This is why CAGR is essential: absolute returns of 80% look impressive, but over 10 years, it’s a modest growth rate.
Example 3: Comparing Multiple Investments
| Investment | Initial | Final (5yr) | Absolute Return | CAGR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Equity MF | ₹1,00,000 | ₹1,76,234 | 76.2% | 12% |
| FD | ₹1,00,000 | ₹1,40,255 | 40.3% | 7% |
| Gold | ₹1,00,000 | ₹1,61,051 | 61.1% | 10% |
| Savings A/c | ₹1,00,000 | ₹1,15,927 | 15.9% | 3% |
Key insight: Just looking at absolute returns, gold (61%) seems close to equity MF (76%). But CAGR reveals equity grew at 12% vs gold at 10% — compounded over longer periods, this 2% gap becomes massive.
CAGR vs Other Return Metrics
| Metric | Best For | Limitation |
|---|---|---|
| CAGR | Fixed lump sum investments over time | Doesn’t account for additional deposits/withdrawals |
| XIRR | SIPs, multiple cash flows at irregular dates | More complex to calculate |
| Absolute Return | Quick comparison of total gains | Ignores time period (misleading) |
| Rolling Return | Assessing consistency of returns | Requires many data points |
| IRR | Regular periodic cash flows | Assumes reinvestment at same rate |
Key takeaway: Use CAGR for lump sum investments held over a period. Use XIRR for SIPs or investments with multiple cash flows. Never rely on absolute returns alone — a 100% return over 10 years (CAGR 7.2%) is very different from 100% in 3 years (CAGR 26%).
Historical CAGR of Popular Investments in India
| Asset Class | 5-Year CAGR | 10-Year CAGR | 20-Year CAGR | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nifty 50 | 14–16% | 12–14% | 13–15% | High |
| Sensex | 14–16% | 12–14% | 14–16% | High |
| Nifty Midcap 150 | 18–22% | 15–18% | 16–19% | Very High |
| Gold (India) | 12–14% | 10–12% | 11–13% | Moderate |
| PPF | 7.1% | 7–8% | 8–9% | Very Low |
| FD (SBI) | 6–7% | 6–7% | 7–8% | Very Low |
| Real Estate (Avg) | 4–6% | 5–8% | 8–12% | Moderate |
| Inflation (CPI) | 5–6% | 5–6% | 6–7% | — |
Data based on historical trends up to 2025. Past performance does not guarantee future returns. Real estate CAGR varies significantly by city and location.
CAGR of Popular Mutual Fund Categories in India
Here’s how different mutual fund categories have performed historically, helping you set realistic return expectations:
| Fund Category | Typical 5-Year CAGR | Typical 10-Year CAGR | Risk | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Large Cap | 12–15% | 11–14% | Moderate | Beginners, stability |
| Mid Cap | 15–20% | 14–18% | High | 5-7 year goals |
| Small Cap | 16–25% | 15–20% | Very High | 7+ year horizon |
| Flexi Cap | 13–17% | 12–16% | Moderate-High | All-weather allocation |
| ELSS (Tax Saver) | 12–16% | 13–16% | Moderate-High | Tax saving + growth |
| Balanced/Hybrid | 10–13% | 10–12% | Moderate | 3-5 year goals |
| Debt (Short Duration) | 6–8% | 7–8% | Low | 1-3 year parking |
| Index Fund (Nifty 50) | 12–14% | 11–13% | Moderate | Passive investors |
Ranges represent category averages. Individual fund performance varies. Always check rolling returns and consistency, not just point-to-point CAGR.
How to Use CAGR for Financial Goal Planning
CAGR is a powerful tool for reverse-engineering your investment goals. Here’s how to use it practically:
Step 1: Define Your Goal
Decide the target amount and timeline. Example: ₹1 crore for retirement in 20 years.
Step 2: Estimate a Realistic CAGR
Based on historical data, use conservative estimates:
- Equity mutual funds: Assume 12% CAGR (not 15-20%)
- Balanced funds: Assume 10% CAGR
- Debt funds / FDs: Assume 7% CAGR
Step 3: Calculate Required Investment
Use the “Required Investment” tab above. At 12% CAGR, to reach ₹1 crore in 20 years, you need a lump sum of approximately ₹10,36,668 today.
Step 4: Adjust for Inflation
If your goal is 20 years away, ₹1 crore then won’t buy what ₹1 crore buys today. At 6% inflation, you’d actually need ₹3.2 crore to match today’s ₹1 crore purchasing power. Always plan with inflation-adjusted targets.
Common Goal Planning Table
| Goal | Target | Timeline | CAGR Assumed | Lump Sum Needed Today |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emergency Fund | ₹5L | 3 years | 7% | ₹4,08,150 |
| Car Down Payment | ₹3L | 2 years | 10% | ₹2,47,934 |
| Child’s Education | ₹50L | 15 years | 12% | ₹9,13,062 |
| Retirement Corpus | ₹3Cr | 25 years | 12% | ₹17,62,780 |
| First ₹1 Crore | ₹1Cr | 20 years | 12% | ₹10,36,668 |
The Rule of 72 — Quick Mental Math with CAGR
The Rule of 72 is a simple shortcut to estimate how long it takes to double your money at a given CAGR:
| CAGR | Years to Double | Typical Investment |
|---|---|---|
| 6% | 12 years | FD, PPF |
| 8% | 9 years | Debt funds, Balanced |
| 10% | 7.2 years | Large cap MF, Gold |
| 12% | 6 years | Nifty 50, Flexi cap |
| 15% | 4.8 years | Mid cap MF |
| 20% | 3.6 years | Small cap (best case) |
To estimate quadrupling time, double the result. At 12% CAGR, your money doubles in 6 years and quadruples in 12 years. At 15%, quadrupling takes under 10 years.
There’s also a Rule of 114 (time to triple) and Rule of 144 (time to quadruple) that work the same way.
Real CAGR: Adjusting for Inflation
The CAGR you see on mutual fund fact sheets is the nominal CAGR. To understand actual wealth creation, you must subtract inflation to get the real CAGR (purchasing power growth).
Examples of Real vs Nominal Returns
| Investment | Nominal CAGR | Inflation | Real CAGR | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nifty 50 | 13% | 6% | 6.6% | Real wealth creation |
| PPF | 7.1% | 6% | 1.04% | Barely beats inflation |
| FD (Bank) | 6.5% | 6% | 0.47% | Almost no real growth |
| Savings A/c | 3% | 6% | −2.83% | Losing purchasing power! |
| Gold | 11% | 6% | 4.72% | Good inflation hedge |
Critical insight: Money in your savings account is actually losing purchasing power every year. Even FDs barely keep up with inflation. This is why equity exposure is essential for long-term goals.
Limitations of CAGR — When Not to Use It
While CAGR is powerful, it has important limitations you should know:
- Hides volatility: CAGR shows a smooth growth rate, but in reality, markets crash and surge. Two investments with the same CAGR can have vastly different risk profiles. Always check standard deviation alongside CAGR.
- Doesn’t handle multiple cash flows: If you invest ₹1L initially and add ₹50K every year, CAGR won’t accurately measure your returns. Use XIRR instead for SIPs or irregular investments.
- Survivorship bias in comparisons: When you see “top funds delivered 20% CAGR,” remember that funds that failed during that period were merged or closed. The average investor experience is often lower than published CAGR.
- Start and end date sensitivity: CAGR is highly sensitive to when you start and end measuring. If you measure Nifty 50 CAGR starting Jan 2008 (peak) vs March 2009 (crash bottom), you’ll get wildly different results for the same index. Use rolling CAGR for fairer comparison.
- Ignores taxes and costs: Published CAGR figures don’t account for capital gains tax, exit loads, expense ratios, or STT. Your actual post-tax return will be lower.
- Not suitable for extremely short periods: CAGR is most meaningful for periods of 3+ years. For shorter durations, absolute or annualized point-to-point returns are more appropriate.
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