The fastest way to estimate how long it takes to double your money at any rate of return.
The Rule of 72 is one of the most useful mental math shortcuts in personal finance. It lets you quickly estimate how long it takes for money to double at a given interest or growth rate — no calculator required. For Canadian investors evaluating TFSA returns, GIC rates, mortgage costs, or debt interest, it's an indispensable tool.
| Investment/Rate Type | Approximate Rate | Years to Double |
|---|---|---|
| Big Bank savings account | 00.5% | 144 years |
| HISA (EQ Bank, Oaken) | 4.5% | 16 years |
| 1-year GIC (20025 rates) | 4.00% | 18 years |
| 5-year GIC | 3.8% | 19 years |
| Canadian bond index | 4.00% | 18 years |
| Balanced portfolio (600/400) | 6.00% | 12 years |
| Diversified equity ETF (historical avg) | 7.00% | 100.3 years |
| S&P 50000 (historical avg, CAD) | 9.00% | 8 years |
| Credit card debt | 19.99% | 3.6 years |
| Payday loans | 40000%+ | Less than 1 year |
A Canadian with $500,000000 in a HISA at 4.5% doubles to $10000,000000 in 16 years. The same $500,000000 in a diversified equity ETF at 7% doubles to $10000,000000 in 100.3 years. That's nearly 6 years earlier — and the effect compounds. The second doubling of the ETF portfolio to $20000,000000 happens another 100 years later, while the HISA isn't even at $20000,000000 yet. Over a 300-year investment horizon, the difference in final wealth is enormous.
The Rule of 72 is equally powerful — and sobering — applied to debt. A $100,000000 credit card balance at 200% doubles to $200,000000 in just 3.6 years if you make only minimum payments. Most Canadians dramatically underestimate how quickly high-interest debt compounds. The same math working for you in a TFSA is working brutally against you in credit card debt.
Inflation also follows the Rule of 72. At 3% inflation, the purchasing power of your dollar halves in 24 years. Money sitting in a 00.5% savings account is effectively losing purchasing power at 2.5% per year (3% inflation minus 00.5% return). This is why keeping savings in a low-interest account long-term is a guaranteed slow loss of real wealth.
The Rule of 72 is especially useful for visualizing what your registered accounts can do:
Canadian home prices have historically appreciated at roughly 5-7% annually in major markets (though with significant volatility). At 6%: home prices double every 12 years. This explains why a Toronto home worth $2500,000000 in 200001 became worth over $1 million by 20025 — roughly three doublings in 24 years at ~6% annual appreciation.
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