The Math You
Actually Need
Personal finance, income, shopping, and home calculators for real life — instant results, no signup required.
- Runs entirely in your browser
- Clear explanations, not just answers
- From compound interest to recipe scaling
Personal Finance
Plan your savings, investments, and debt payoff.
Compound Interest Calculator
Calculate how your money grows over time with compound interest and regular contributions.
Savings Goal Calculator
Find out how much to save each month to reach your target.
Retirement Calculator
Plan your retirement with inflation-adjusted projections.
Credit Card Payoff Calculator
See how long it takes to pay off your balance and how much extra payments save.
Loan Payoff Calculator
Calculate your loan payoff timeline with extra payment modeling.
Investment Return Calculator
Calculate CAGR, total return, and inflation-adjusted gains.
Net Worth Calculator
Track your assets minus liabilities in one place.
Emergency Fund Calculator
Calculate your target emergency fund and savings timeline.
Income & Tax
Understand your paycheck and spending power.
Salary to Hourly Calculator
Convert annual salary to hourly, weekly, and biweekly pay.
Take-Home Pay Calculator
Estimate your net pay after taxes and deductions.
Hourly to Annual Calculator
Convert hourly wage to annual salary with overtime.
Tip Calculator
Calculate tip and split the bill with custom percentages.
Sales Tax Calculator
Calculate pre-tax or post-tax price with state rates.
Discount Calculator
Calculate sale price, savings, and stacked discounts.
Shopping & Everyday
Make smarter decisions with your money.
Price Per Unit Calculator
Compare products by unit cost to find the best deal.
Markup & Margin Calculator
Convert between cost, markup, margin, and selling price.
Split Bill Calculator
Split a bill with unequal shares, tax, and tip.
Fuel Cost Calculator
Estimate fuel cost for a trip based on distance and MPG.
Recipe Scaler
Scale recipe ingredients up or down by serving count.
Auto & Home
Big decisions, clear numbers.
Car Loan Calculator
Calculate monthly car payment with trade-in and sales tax.
Lease vs Buy Calculator
Compare total cost of leasing versus buying a car.
Electricity Cost Calculator
Calculate how much an appliance costs to run per month.
Paint Calculator
Calculate how many gallons of paint you need for a room.
Why Everyday Math Matters More Than You Think
Most financial mistakes aren't dramatic — they're quiet. Paying the minimum on a credit card because you never ran the numbers. Choosing the "bigger" package at the store without checking the unit price. Accepting a salary offer without knowing what it means per hour. These aren't failures of intelligence — they're failures of having the right tool at the right moment.
GrownUpMath exists because school math stops at algebra, but life math keeps going. Nobody teaches you how compound interest actually works on your savings, how to calculate whether leasing or buying a car costs less over five years, or how much of your paycheck disappears to taxes before it hits your bank account. These are the calculations that shape your financial life, and they shouldn't require a spreadsheet or a finance degree to get right.
The Power of Compound Interest
Albert Einstein allegedly called compound interest "the eighth wonder of the world." Whether or not he actually said it, the math backs it up. When your interest earns interest, growth becomes exponential rather than linear. A $10,000 investment at 7% annual return grows to $19,672 in 10 years, $38,697 in 20 years, and $76,123 in 30 years — all without adding a single dollar after the initial deposit. Add $200 per month in contributions and that 30-year number jumps to $319,000.
The flip side is equally powerful: compound interest working against you on debt. A $5,000 credit card balance at 22% APR with minimum payments takes over 20 years to pay off and costs more than $10,000 in interest. The credit card payoff calculator shows you exactly what extra payments save — and it's almost always more than you expect.
Your Salary Is More Than an Annual Number
When someone offers you $65,000 per year, what does that actually mean? After federal and state taxes, Social Security, and Medicare, your take-home might be closer to $48,000 — or $923 per week, $23 per hour. Knowing that number changes how you think about spending: a $200 dinner is nearly 9 hours of your work. A $1,200 phone is over 52 hours. The salary-to-hourly converter makes this translation instant.
Why GrownUpMath: Private, Free, No Agenda
Every calculator on GrownUpMath runs entirely in your browser. Your salary, savings, debts, and spending — none of it leaves your device. There are no accounts, no data collection, and no "get a quote" buttons that funnel you to a sales team. Just math, clearly explained, with instant results. The tools you need for the decisions that actually matter.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I convert salary to hourly rate?
Divide your annual salary by 2,080 (52 weeks x 40 hours). For example, $60,000 / 2,080 = $28.85/hour. Adjust the hours-per-week if you work more or less than 40. The salary calculator handles all variations including overtime.
How does compound interest work?
Compound interest earns interest on your interest. A $10,000 investment at 7% compounded monthly grows to ~$19,672 in 10 years without any additional contributions. The key factors are: rate, compounding frequency, time, and regular contributions. Try the compound interest calculator to see your own projections.
How much should I have in an emergency fund?
3-6 months of essential expenses is the standard recommendation. If your monthly essentials are $3,000, aim for $9,000-$18,000. Self-employed or single-income households should target 6-12 months. The emergency fund calculator helps you set a target and plan your savings timeline.
How do I calculate a tip quickly?
For 20%: find 10% by moving the decimal left one place, then double it. For a $47 bill: 10% = $4.70, doubled = $9.40. Round up to $10 for easy math. For 15%, find 10% and add half of that. The tip calculator handles custom percentages and bill splitting.