5 Free Financial Calculators I Built That I Actually Use Every Month
I built FinCalc AI after realizing I was maintaining the same Excel spreadsheets for years — mortgage amortization, compound interest projections, retirement math. Every time I wanted to run a scenario I would open a spreadsheet, tweak a cell, realize I broke a formula, and start over.
So I built calculator versions that live in the browser and handle the edge cases I kept tripping on.
1. Mortgage Calculator
Most online mortgage calculators give you a monthly payment and call it done. The useful ones show you the full amortization schedule — how much goes to principal vs interest every single month over 30 years.
The thing that surprised me: bi-weekly payments. If you pay half your mortgage every two weeks instead of the full amount once a month, you make 26 half-payments per year = 13 full payments. On a $400K mortgage at 6.5%, that shaves 4-5 years off the loan and saves ~$65K in interest. Most people do not know this.
2. Compound Interest Calculator
The "boring but important" one. Input: starting amount, monthly contribution, interest rate, time horizon. Output: total balance, total contributions, total interest earned.
The eye-opening scenario: $500/month invested at 7% for 30 years = ~$610K. But wait just 5 more years to start? Now it is only ~$440K. That 5-year delay costs $170K. I added a "cost of waiting" line to the output because seeing that number is what actually motivates people to start.
3. Retirement Calculator
This one required the most research. The 4% rule is the standard but it is based on US market data from 1926-1995. I built in a Monte Carlo simulation mode that runs 1,000 random market scenarios instead of assuming a flat 7% return every year.
The sobering finding: the 4% rule has a ~5% failure rate over 30-year retirements. At 5% withdrawal, the failure rate jumps to ~25%.
4. ROI Calculator
Simple but the one I use for evaluating side projects. Input your costs (time + money) and expected returns, get payback period and annualized ROI. The trick: it forces you to value your time at a real hourly rate, not $0.
5. Debt Payoff Calculator
Snowball vs avalanche comparison. Avalanche (highest interest first) is mathematically optimal. Snowball (smallest balance first) works better psychologically. Showing both side by side lets people see the actual dollar difference — usually $200-500 over the life of the debt.
→ All free at financalcai.com. No signup, no email, works on mobile.
Top comments (1)
This is cool! I'm curious if you used