Key takeaways
- Projected (12 mo) = current × (1 + growth%)^12. Growth compounds — each month builds on the last.
- Months to goal = ln(goal ÷ current) ÷ ln(1 + growth%), or 0 if you're already at or past the goal.
- A steady 3–10% monthly growth rate is healthy for an established account; it usually slows as you scale.
- The ring shows your percent of the goal reached when a goal is set.
How to project follower growth
Audiences grow by compounding, not by adding a flat number each month. A 6% monthly rate applies to a bigger base every month, so the raw number of new followers keeps rising even though the percentage stays the same. To project a year out, raise (1 + your monthly rate) to the 12th power and multiply by your current count. To find when you'll hit a target, solve that same compound formula for time using natural logs.
If your goal is at or below your current count, months-to-goal is zero — you're already there. The ring fills toward your goal as a share of the way there; with no goal set it stays empty and you read the 12-month projection instead.
Worked example: 20,000 followers at 6%/mo
Projected in 12 months = 20,000 × (1.06)^12 ≈ 40,243 — you roughly double in a year at 6% monthly. Aiming for 100,000? Months to goal = ln(100,000 ÷ 20,000) ÷ ln(1.06) = ln(5) ÷ ln(1.06) ≈ 28 months. You're currently 20% of the way to that goal, which is what the ring shows.
What a monthly rate compounds to in a year
| Monthly growth | 12-month multiple | 20k becomes |
|---|---|---|
| 2% | 1.27× | ~25,400 |
| 4% | 1.60× | ~32,000 |
| 6% | 2.01× | ~40,200 |
| 8% | 2.52× | ~50,400 |
| 10% | 3.14× | ~62,800 |
| 15% | 5.35× | ~107,000 |
Turning growth into income
A bigger, engaged audience raises every revenue lever. Once you've projected your reach, price a brand deal at that size with the sponsorship rate calculator, model the affiliate sales those followers drive with the affiliate income calculator, or estimate platform earnings with the YouTube money calculator. Growth is the input; income is the output.
Frequently asked questions
How do I project my follower growth?
Compound your current count by your monthly rate: projected in 12 months = current × (1 + rate)^12, where rate is your monthly percent ÷ 100. Each month's gains become the base for the next.
What's a good monthly growth rate?
A steady 3–10% is healthy for an established account; new or viral accounts can spike higher. Sustained double-digit growth is rare and slows as you scale.
How is months-to-goal calculated?
The compound formula solved for time: months = ln(goal ÷ current) ÷ ln(1 + rate). If the goal is at or below your current count, the answer is zero.
Why does growth compound?
A percentage applies to a larger base each month, so the absolute new followers rise over time even at a constant rate — that's why small steady gains add up fast.
Will my growth rate stay constant?
Rarely. It usually slows as the account matures and can spike with a viral post. Use this as a planning projection and revisit it with your real rate.
Are these projections accurate?
They're estimates based on a constant compound rate. Real growth varies with algorithm changes, consistency, seasonality, and saturation. Treat it as a target-setting tool.
Projections use the standard compound-growth formula; growth-rate benchmarks reflect commonly reported creator-account ranges. Real growth is non-linear and platform-dependent. For context on typical creator growth patterns, see published social media growth benchmarks. Your own recent monthly rate is the best input.
Last reviewed June 14, 2026