Annual Equivalent Rate (AER)
What is AER?
The Annual Equivalent Rate (AER), also called the effective annual rate (EAR) or annual percentage yield (APY), shows the actual annual return on an interest-bearing product after taking compounding into account. It converts a quoted (nominal) rate and its compounding frequency into a single annualized rate that reflects true growth.
Key takeaways
- AER incorporates the effect of intra-year compounding; the more frequent the compounding, the higher the AER (for a given nominal rate).
- Use AER to compare savings accounts, bonds, or other interest-bearing products with different compounding periods.
- AER does not include fees, taxes, or other costs that can reduce net returns.
Formula
AER is calculated as:
AER = (1 + r/n)^n - 1
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where:
* r = stated (nominal) annual interest rate expressed as a decimal
* n = number of compounding periods per year
How to calculate AER (step-by-step)
- Convert the stated annual rate to a decimal (
r). - Divide
rby the number of compounding periodsn. - Add 1 and raise the result to the power
n. - Subtract 1 and convert to a percentage.
Example: for monthly compounding with a 6% nominal rate (r = 0.06, n = 12):
AER = (1 + 0.06/12)^12 - 1 ≈ 0.061678 → 6.1678%
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Examples
Savings accounts
Compare three quoted accounts:
* Bank A: 3.70% quoted, compounded annually (n = 1)
AER = (1 + 0.037/1)^1 - 1 = 3.70%
* Bank B: 3.65% quoted, compounded quarterly (n = 4)
AER = (1 + 0.0365/4)^4 - 1 ≈ 3.70% (effectively the same as Bank A)
* Bank C: 3.70% quoted, compounded semiannually (n = 2)
AER = (1 + 0.037/2)^2 - 1 ≈ 3.73% (slightly higher due to more compounding)
This shows how identical or similar nominal rates can produce different actual yields depending on compounding frequency.
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Bond coupon example
A bond with a nominal 8% annual rate paid semiannually (r = 0.08, n = 2):
AER = (1 + 0.08/2)^2 - 1 = (1.04)^2 - 1 = 8.16% — the effective annual yield is higher than the stated nominal rate because of semiannual compounding.
AER vs. stated (nominal) interest and APR
- Stated (nominal) rate: the advertised annual rate that does not reflect intra-year compounding.
- AER/EAR/APY: the annual rate after compounding; the figure you should use to compare returns.
- APR: often used for loan costs and can exclude compounding; definitions vary by region. When comparing borrowing costs (APR) and investment yields (AER), be careful to compare equivalent measures.
Pros and cons of using AER
Pros:
* Reflects true annual return when interest compounds.
* Makes comparisons among accounts and investments straightforward.
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Cons:
* Does not include fees, taxes, or charges that affect net returns.
* Not always shown by providers; you may need to calculate it yourself.
* Assumes reinvestment of interest at the same rate.
Practical considerations
- Higher compounding frequency increases AER for a given nominal rate.
- For borrowers, more frequent compounding increases the effective cost; for savers, it increases effective return.
- Continuous compounding is a theoretical limit; in practice, compounding is periodic (daily, monthly, quarterly, etc.).
- Always check for fees, penalties, and tax treatment in addition to AER when choosing products.
Tools
Online AER/EAR or APY calculators can automate the calculation. Examples: CalculatorSoup, Omni Calculator, and similar financial calculators.
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Bottom line
AER converts nominal rates with different compounding schedules into a single, comparable annual rate that reflects true interest growth. Use it to compare savings accounts, bonds, and other interest-bearing products, but remember to consider fees, taxes, and other costs that AER does not capture.