The Coffee Cost Calculator shows you the true financial impact of your daily café habit. Enter how many cups you buy each day, the price you pay per cup, and your currency — the calculator instantly compares your spend against cheaper alternatives and projects what that money could grow to if invested instead.
Most people are genuinely surprised. A £4.50 flat white every working day costs over £1,100 a year. Over ten years, invested in a broad market index fund at a historical average return of 10% per year, that same money grows to more than £19,000. The calculator does that arithmetic for you — instantly, in your own currency.
The tool covers three scenarios: your current café habit, switching to instant coffee (estimated at £0.07 per cup), and switching to ground beans brewed at home (estimated at £0.35 per cup). The "Best Saving" row shows the maximum you could save by switching to the cheapest alternative — and the investment projection shows what that saving could become over 1, 3, 5 and 10 years.
The investment projection uses the S&P 500 historical average annual return of approximately 10%, compounded monthly. This figure is derived from long-term market data spanning over 90 years and is widely cited in personal finance literature (Shiller, R.J., Irrational Exuberance, Princeton University Press, 2000; updated annually at econ.yale.edu/~shiller/data.htm). Past performance does not guarantee future results, and the projection is intended as an illustrative benchmark rather than financial advice.
The cost-per-cup estimates for instant coffee (£0.07) and ground beans (£0.35) are derived from UK retail price data for standard supermarket products. These figures are intentionally conservative — premium alternatives cost significantly more. Your actual costs will vary by brand, region, and preparation method.
The calculator uses compound interest mathematics: FV = PMT × [((1 + r)^n − 1) / r], where PMT is the monthly saving, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12), and n is the number of months. This is the standard formula used by financial planners to model regular investment contributions.
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