Payback Period Calculator
Find how many years it takes to recover an investment from annual cash flows. Supports simple payback and discounted payback with time-value-of-money adjustment.
What is the Payback Period?
The payback period is one of the most widely used metrics in capital budgeting and investment analysis. It measures the length of time required to recover the initial cost of an investment from the net cash flows it generates. It is the answer to the fundamental business question: how long before I get my money back?
The payback period is intuitively appealing because it is simple to calculate and easy to communicate. A project that returns your investment in 3 years is obviously more liquid than one that takes 8 years. Companies with limited capital and high uncertainty tend to favour investments with shorter payback periods, since the money is returned more quickly and can be reinvested or redeployed.
There are two main versions of the payback period. The simple payback period divides the initial investment by the annual cash inflow, treating all future cash flows as if they have the same value as today's money. This is fast and easy but conceptually flawed for long-horizon investments, because it ignores inflation and opportunity cost.
The discounted payback period corrects this by first discounting each year's cash flow to its present value using a chosen discount rate (typically the company's weighted average cost of capital, or WACC). You then accumulate these discounted cash flows year by year until the total reaches the initial investment. Because discounting reduces the value of future cash flows, the discounted payback period is always longer than the simple payback period. For a 10% discount rate, ₹25,000 received in year 5 is worth only about ₹15,523 in today's money — significantly less than its face value.
Payback period works best as a screening tool for early-stage investment decisions, not as a complete evaluation. It should always be used alongside Net Present Value (NPV) and Internal Rate of Return (IRR) to get a full picture of an investment's attractiveness. An investment can have a short payback period but negative NPV if the returns fall off sharply after the payback year. Conversely, a long payback period project may have very high NPV if cash flows continue strongly for many years after payback.
Formula
Simple Payback Period:
Discounted Payback Period:
For the fractional last year: Discounted Payback = (Year − 1) + (Remaining needed / PV of that year). This gives the precise year and fraction at which the investment is recovered in present-value terms.
How to Use This Calculator
- Choose your mode — click Simple Payback for a quick calculation ignoring time value, or Discounted Payback to apply a discount rate and get a more accurate result.
- Enter the initial investment — this is the total upfront capital required (e.g., cost of machine, property purchase price, project cost).
- Enter the annual cash inflow — the net annual cash generated by the investment (revenues minus ongoing operating expenses, not including depreciation or tax).
- For discounted mode, enter the discount rate — use your company's WACC, required rate of return, or a benchmark rate like 8%, 10%, or 12%.
- Click Calculate — see payback period in years and months, annual return ratio, and a detailed note showing the calculation. For discounted mode with payback under 15 years, a year-by-year cumulative PV table is shown.