Discounted Payback Period
The time to recover the initial investment using present-value-adjusted cash flows.
What is Discounted Payback?
The discounted payback period improves on the simple payback period by discounting each future cash flow to present value before accumulating them. This means the discounted payback is always longer than the simple payback period because the discounted cash flows are smaller. If a project pays back within its life even on a discounted basis, it is guaranteed to have a positive NPV up to the payback date. Although discounted payback still ignores cash flows after the cutoff date, it is a useful risk screen that combines the intuitive appeal of payback analysis with the economic realism of discounting.
Formula
Worked Example
Same 5-year project at 10% hurdle rate
Source: CFA Institute — Corporate Finance, 4th ed., Capital Budgeting (2024-01-01)
Calculate Discounted Payback
Enter comma-separated cash flows starting at t=0. CF₀ must be negative. E.g.: -500000, 120000, 150000, 180000, 160000, 130000
Cost of capital or hurdle rate
Discounted Payback Period
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How to Interpret Discounted Payback
📚 Capital Budgeting — Complete the path
- NPV
- IRR
- MIRR
- Payback Period
- Discounted Payback
- Profitability Index