The financial calculators are built-in helpers for quick what-if sums: future value, interest and returns, plus a tax estimate. They let you sanity-check a decision without leaving the books or reaching for a spreadsheet.
- What the calculators are for
- That they are decision aids, not postings
What they do
The set covers the common time-value questions, estimating a future value, an implied interest rate, or a return, and a tax calculator that estimates the tax burden from a given income. They are quick reference tools sitting alongside the accounts, useful when you are weighing a financing option or a quote.
How to think about them
The calculators compute, they do not record. Nothing a calculator produces is posted to the ledger; treat the figures as estimates to inform a decision, then enter the real transaction through the proper document when it happens.
Related
- Reference: Financial Reports (the real numbers)