FiscalCalc

Investment Return Calculator in Hawaii

Investing 15% of Hawaii's $100,745 median income ($15,112/year) at 7% grows to $1,427,491 over 30 years — $974,131 in investment gains on $453,360 contributed. State income tax 11% applies to gains in taxable accounts. Formula shown, sources cited — no account required.

$1427K
30yr Growth (15% savings, 7%)
11%
State Tax on Gains
~5.2%
After-Tax Return (Taxable Acct)
$
%

S&P 500 historical avg ≈ 10%

years

The calculator that works for you — not for lenders.

Free. No email. No ads tied to your inputs. No one trying to sell you a financial product.

See all 20 calculators →

Investment Return Formulas

Total return on a lump sum:

FV = PV × (1 + r)^t

PV = initial investment | r = annual return | t = years

CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate):

CAGR = (Ending Value ÷ Beginning Value)^(1 ÷ Years) − 1

With annual contributions:

FV = PMT × [(1 + r)^t − 1] ÷ r

PMT = annual contribution (end of year)

Hawaii example — $$15,112/year at 7%:

  • After 10 years: $208,794 ($151,120 contributed)
  • After 20 years: $619,524 ($302,240 contributed)
  • After 30 years: $1,427,491 ($453,360 contributed + $974,131 gains)

Tax note for Hawaii investors: In a taxable brokerage account, investment gains are subject to 11% state income tax plus federal capital gains tax (~15% for long-term). Combined rate ≈26%, reducing an effective 7% return to approximately 5.2% after tax. Tax-advantaged accounts avoid this drag entirely — use them first.

Questions You Might Ask — Investment Returns in Hawaii

What does investing 15% of Hawaii's median income grow to?+
Hawaii's median household income is $100,745/year. Investing 15% ($15,112/year = $1,259/month) at a 7% annual return grows to: $208,794 after 10 years, $619,524 after 20 years, $1,427,491 after 30 years. Over 30 years, $453,360 in contributions generate $974,131 in investment gains — the 15% savings rate compounds to nearly 3.1× the amount invested.
What is CAGR and how is it calculated?+
CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate) is the smooth annual rate at which an investment would need to grow to reach its ending value from its beginning value in a given period. Formula: CAGR = (Ending Value ÷ Beginning Value)^(1 ÷ Years) − 1. Example: $10,000 grows to $20,000 in 10 years → CAGR = (20,000 ÷ 10,000)^(1/10) − 1 = 2^0.1 − 1 = 7.18%. CAGR smooths out annual volatility to give a single, comparable return figure. The S&P 500's 10-year CAGR as of recent years has been approximately 12–14% nominally; long-run (since 1926) CAGR is approximately 10% annually.
How does Hawaii's income tax affect investment returns?+
In Hawaii, long-term capital gains in a taxable brokerage account are taxed at the state income tax rate of 11% plus federal long-term capital gains (typically 15%). Combined rate: approximately 26%. On a 7% gross return, the after-tax return in a taxable account is approximately 5.2% annually. This is why tax-advantaged accounts (401k, IRA, Roth IRA) are so valuable in higher-tax states — they eliminate the state tax drag on investment growth entirely.
What is a good annual return rate to use for Hawaii projections?+
For diversified equity portfolio planning: 7% nominal is a widely used conservative long-run assumption (approximately the historical S&P 500 nominal return minus a 2–3% buffer for uncertainty and fees). The actual S&P 500 long-run nominal return (since 1926) is approximately 10%; after 3% inflation, the real return is approximately 7%. For a 60/40 stock-bond portfolio, 5–6% nominal is more realistic. For a money market or HYSA, 4–5% is achievable in the current rate environment but will change over time. Use 7% as a baseline for long-term projections; model at 5% and 9% to understand the range of outcomes.
Should Hawaii investors prioritize tax-advantaged or taxable accounts?+
The order of operations is the same in every state, but especially important in Hawaii (11% state income tax): (1) Capture the full 401(k) employer match first — immediate 50–100% return. (2) Max an HSA if eligible — triple tax advantage. (3) Max a Roth or Traditional IRA ($7,000/year in 2026). (4) Return to the 401(k) up to the $23,500 limit. (5) Invest in taxable brokerage accounts for amounts beyond these limits. In Hawaii, every dollar in a tax-advantaged account avoids the 11% state income tax on contributions (Traditional) or on decades of growth (Roth).

Data Sources & Methodology

S&P 500 historical return data from Robert Shiller (Yale University) and Aswath Damodaran (NYU Stern). CAGR formula per CFA Institute. State income tax rates from Tax Foundation. Federal capital gains rates from IRS Publication 550. Median household income from U.S. Census Bureau ACS. Projections assume a fixed annual return rate; actual returns vary. Last updated 2026.

Investment Return Calculator by State

State tax rates on investment gains vary — see local context for all 50 states.