How Long to Save $250k
at $3,000/Month
Investing $3,000 every month from a starting balance of $0, here is exactly how long it takes to reach $250,000 at different return rates.
At 7% Annual Return
5.68 years
$3,000/mo · $250k target · starting from $0
Timeline at Every Return Rate
Same $3,000/month contribution. Same $250k target. Only the return rate changes.
| Annual Return | Context | Years to $250k |
|---|---|---|
| 5.0% | Conservative (bonds + stocks) | 5.97 yrs |
| 6.0% | Moderate (balanced portfolio) | 5.82 yrs |
| 7.0% ✓ | Baseline (diversified index) | 5.68 yrs |
| 8.0% | Optimistic (equity-heavy) | 5.54 yrs |
How the Math Works
When you invest $3,000 every month, two things grow your balance: your contributions and compound interest on everything already invested.
The Formula
n = log(1 + target × r / contribution) / log(1 + r)
where r = annual return / 12 (monthly rate), n = months
Over 5.68 years, you personally contribute $204,480. The remaining $45,520 comes from compound growth — meaning compound interest delivers 1.2x your total contributions toward the final $250k target.
What Happens After You Hit $250k?
Once you reach $250k, you have choices depending on your retirement goal.
If $250k is your retirement number
You can stop working and withdraw from the portfolio. At a 4% withdrawal rate, $250k generates $833/month indefinitely.
If $250k is your Coast FIRE number
You can stop contributing entirely and let compound growth carry your portfolio to your larger retirement target. You still work to cover living expenses — but saving for retirement becomes optional.
See Your Full Growth Projection
The calculator shows the year-by-year breakdown — contributions vs compound growth — so you can see exactly when the growth starts outpacing your contributions.
Open with Your Numbers →Free · No signup · Opens with $3,000/mo pre-filled
Frequently Asked Questions
Does this include money already saved? +
No — the timeline above starts from $0. If you already have savings, you'll reach $250k faster. The compound interest calculator lets you enter a starting balance and shows the adjusted timeline.
What return rate should I use? +
The S&P 500 has historically returned around 10% annually before inflation, or roughly 7% in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. Most long-term financial planning uses 6–8% nominal return for diversified index fund portfolios. The 7% baseline used here is a reasonable middle ground. Conservative planners use 6%; aggressive planners use 8–9%.
Is $3,000/month realistic? +
Investing $3,000/month represents an aggressive savings commitment typically requiring a high income or very lean spending. As a rule of thumb, financial planners often suggest targeting 15–20% of gross income for retirement savings.
What if I increase contributions over time? +
Even small annual increases significantly reduce the timeline. A 3% annual increase in contributions — matching a typical salary raise — can cut years off the timeline. The compound interest calculator has an annual contribution increase slider to model exactly this.
Related Calculators & Guides
Timeline calculated using the future value of monthly annuity formula, compounded monthly. Starting balance assumed to be $0. Returns are nominal (before inflation). This is educational content and not personalised financial advice.