Fees Everywhere Calculator

The index-fund lesson made the case against a single fee — the expense ratio. But a real investor rarely pays just one. There's the fund's own expense ratio, often an advisor or 'wrap' fee charged as a percentage of everything you hold, and the trading and spread costs that ride along inside every buy, sell, and currency swap. Crucially, they all come off the same gross return, so they don't compete — they ADD. A 0.5% fund plus a 1% advisor plus 0.3% in trading isn't 'a few small fees'; it's a 1.8% all-in drag, and 1.8% compounded against you for thirty years devours a third or more of the balance you'd otherwise have. This lesson is the capstone on cost: it teaches you to stop judging fees one line at a time and start totaling the all-in number, because that single blended figure is what actually compounds against you. The simulator grows the same money against the fee-free market ceiling and the line you actually keep, and splits the gap between them into stacked, color-coded slices — one per fee source — so you can watch three 'tiny' percentages fuse into one fat band and see, in dollars, which fee is costing you the most. The durable takeaways: add every fee into one all-in number before you judge it; a percentage that looks like a rounding error is enormous once multiplied by decades; and trimming the fattest slice — usually a percent-of-assets advisor fee — is one of the highest-return moves in personal finance, because it's a guaranteed, permanent raise to your net return.

Free and interactive — no sign-up, nothing to install. Read the full lesson for the plain-language explanation.