Find clear answers about our investment simulator, DCA calculator, compound interest calculator, budget planner, Premium access, data sources, privacy, exports, and the best way to use each tool for better financial planning.
Learn which calculator to use first, how to interpret projections, and how to connect budgeting with investing.
Understand DCA, lump sum, backtesting, contribution planning, portfolio growth, and historical scenario limits.
Review what Premium adds, when advanced simulations are useful, and how exports support deeper analysis.
WhatIfInvested is a collection of financial planning tools designed to help you model investing, saving, budgeting, and long-term portfolio growth. The site includes calculators for recurring investments, compound interest, historical simulations, budget planning, and strategy comparison.
If you already know how much you can invest each month, start with the DCA calculator. If you want to test historical outcomes, use the investment simulator. If your monthly surplus is unclear, begin with WhatIfBudget.
No. The tools are educational planning resources. They help you understand possible outcomes, compare assumptions, and make more informed decisions, but they do not replace a licensed financial advisor or personalized professional guidance.
The simulator lets you test how a past investment strategy might have performed using a selected asset, start date, contribution amount, and investment schedule. It is especially useful for comparing recurring investing with lump sum investing and understanding how time, volatility, and consistency affect results.
Yes. The simulator is built to help compare different asset types when data is available. For popular broad-market ETFs, it can be useful alongside dedicated guides like lump sum vs DCA strategy comparison.
Historical data shows what happened in a specific period, not what must happen again. Markets change because of valuations, interest rates, inflation, investor behavior, regulations, and business cycles. Use simulations as decision support, not as predictions.
DCA means dollar-cost averaging. It is the habit of investing a fixed amount on a regular schedule, such as weekly or monthly. The method can reduce timing stress and make investing easier to maintain over long periods.
Lump sum investing can perform better when markets rise soon after the investment, because more money is invested earlier. DCA can feel easier psychologically and may reduce regret during volatile periods. The best choice depends on your cash position, risk tolerance, and ability to stay invested.
Use the investment simulator for historical comparisons and the DCA calculator for forward-looking recurring contribution projections. For a deeper explanation, read the lump sum vs DCA guide.
The compound interest calculator estimates future value based on starting balance, return assumption, compounding frequency, time horizon, and recurring contributions. It is best for simple long-term projections.
WhatIfBudget helps you identify monthly surplus, savings rate, expense pressure, and budget health. Once you know how much you can realistically save or invest, you can test that amount in the DCA calculator or simulator.
The calculators hub groups the main tools, including the investment simulator, DCA calculator, compound interest calculator, budget planner, and related financial planning resources.
Premium is designed for users who want deeper investment simulations, more advanced scenario testing, and a more complete planning workflow. It is most useful when you compare multiple strategies or want to analyze decisions beyond a basic calculator.
You can review available options on the pricing page. That page explains who Premium is for, how it differs from the free tools, and when upgrading makes practical sense.
No. The free tools remain available for basic planning. Premium is for users who want expanded functionality, deeper analysis, and more advanced simulations.
The calculators use standard financial formulas and user-entered assumptions. Accuracy depends on the inputs, selected time period, asset data availability, and whether fees, taxes, inflation, and real-world investor behavior are included in your interpretation.
Most calculator inputs are processed in the browser for planning purposes. For privacy details, review the privacy policy. Avoid entering sensitive account credentials or private financial identifiers into calculator fields.
If something looks wrong or you want to suggest an improvement, use the contact page. Include the page URL, the inputs you used, and what result seemed unexpected so the issue can be reviewed faster.
Start with a calculator, then use the simulator to compare how different contribution habits, time horizons, and investment strategies can change long-term results.