Interest Calculator

Calculate Paisa Interest, Simple Interest & Compound Interest with day-wise precision.

Paise
Example: 2 Paise = 2% per month = 24% per year.

Total Interest

₹0

Duration: 0 Days (0Y 0M 0D)
Principal₹10,000
Final Amount₹10,000

Free Online Interest Calculator (Paisa, Simple, Compound)

Calculating exact returns on investments or predicting loan payback paths can be confusing due to the variety of interest structures used worldwide. Be it traditional village lending or formal banking investments, our Online Interest Calculator streamlines complex percentage mathematics into a single, intuitive interface.

Featuring Paisa Interest, Simple Interest, and Compound Interest modules, this tool supports day-wise precision. Whether calculating a short-term 12-day loan or projecting a 10-year investment growth trajectory, the results are delivered instantly on your screen without sending any financial data to external servers.

Understanding Interest Calculation Methods

Paisa Interest

Commonly used in Indian villages and informal loan markets. It denotes interest charged in "paise per ₹100 per month." For example, a 2 Paisa Interest equals a 2% monthly rate (or a massive 24% annual rate). Formula: (Principal × Rate (in paise) × Months) / 100.

Simple Interest (SI)

Most commonly used for short-term personal loans and fixed deposits. The interest charge is anchored only to the original principal amount. Because it doesn't compound, the interest payout is identical every year. Formula: (P × R × T) / 100.

Compound Interest (CI)

Utilized for mutual funds, stocks, and long-term bank loans. Interest is calculated on the initial principal plus any accumulated interest from prior periods. The "snowball effect" results in explosive growth over decades. Formula: P (1 + R/100)^T - P.

How to Convert Paisa Interest to Percentage?

Many borrowers mistakenly believe informal "Paisa Interest" loans are cheaper than bank loans. "1 Paisa" roughly means "1 Rupee per 100 Rupees per month". Let's translate that into standard Annual Percentage Rates (APR):

  • 1 Paisa Interest = 1% per month → 12% per year
  • 1.5 Paisa Interest = 1.5% per month → 18% per year
  • 2 Paisa Interest = 2% per month → 24% per year (Standard credit card rate)
  • 3 Paisa Interest = 3% per month → 36% per year (Extremely high risk)

Frequently Asked Questions

Bankers and institutional lenders utilize exact-day mathematics rather than rough monthly estimations. If you deposit capital on January 1st and withdraw it on January 15th, you are entitled to exactly 14 or 15 days of prorated interest. Our calculator automatically handles this leap-year-aware chronological difference.

Simple Interest essentially functions as a "Flat Rate"—interest is charged continuously on the maximum principal irrespective of how much you have paid back. A "Reducing Balance" loan (like an EMI) recalculates the interest downward every time you make a partial payment to the principal, drastically saving the borrower money.

"Paisa interest" is purely a traditional colloquial term. Formal financial institutions (Banks and NBFCs) are required by federal regulations to state loan charges in Annual Percentage Rates (APR) for transparent comparison. Informal lending at excessive Paisa rates may violate local money-lending or usury laws depending on the jurisdiction.

Absolutely. By using the Start Date and End Date selectors, the tool calculates the exact number of days. For example, if you lend money for 12 days, the tool will prorate the interest based on a 365-day year (or 30-day month for Paisa interest), giving you a precise decimal-accurate figure.

Our current Compound Interest module utilizes standard annual compounding. This is the common baseline for long-term investments like Fixed Deposits (FD) or retirement planning. If you require monthly compounding, we recommend checking our dedicated recurring deposit (RD) tools.

The tool uses full JavaScript Date objects, which are leap-year aware. If your investment period crosses February 29th, the tool calculates the duration correctly, ensuring that extra day of interest is either included or excluded based on the exact calendar logic.