Rule of 72
The rule of 72 is a mental shortcut that estimates how many years an investment takes to double: divide 72 by the annual percentage growth rate. It is most accurate for rates roughly between 6% and 10%.
See it move
The rule of 72 estimates doubling time: divide 72 by the annual growth rate as a whole number. At 8% growth, 72 ÷ 8 = 9 years, versus the exact ln(2) ÷ ln(1.08) ≈ 9.01 years — essentially exact. The shortcut is most accurate for rates of roughly 6% to 10%.
The formula
Variables
- Estimated years to double (years)
- Annual growth rate (%)
Quick estimate of doubling time, where r is the annual growth rate as a whole number percentage (use 8, not 0.08).
Variables
- Exact years to double (years)
- Annual growth rate (decimal)
The precise compound-growth doubling time, used to check the rule of 72 approximation; here r is a decimal (0.08, not 8).
Check yourself
An investment grows at a constant 6% a year. Using the rule of 72, approximately how many years will it take to double in value?