A loan of $37,000 is made at 3%interest, compounded annually. After how many years will the amount due reach $49,000 or more? (Use the calculator provided if necessary.)

Write the answer as a whole number.

****I get 1.03^10 = 49,724.91

So is the answer 10 years at 49,725.00?

Yes, our answers are exactly the same!

To find the number of years it will take for the amount due to reach $49,000 or more, we need to use the formula for compound interest:

A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt)

Where:
A = the amount due ($49,000 in this case)
P = the initial principal ($37,000 in this case)
r = the annual interest rate (3% or 0.03 as a decimal)
n = the number of compounding periods per year (1 for annually compounded interest)
t = the number of years

We want to solve for t, so we can rearrange the formula:

t = (log(A/P)) / (n * log(1 + r/n))

Substituting the given values into the formula:

t = (log(49000/37000)) / (1 * log(1 + 0.03/1))

Using a calculator:

t ≈ (ln(1.324324)) / (ln(1.03))

t ≈ 9.912

Since we need to give the answer as a whole number, we round up to the nearest whole number:

t ≈ 10

So, the loan amount will reach $49,000 or more after approximately 10 years.