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NPV (Net Present Value / VAN)

NPV helps answer a deeper question than simple profitability: is this project really worth it today, once time and risk are taken into account? Because money received in the future is not equal to money today.

In short: NPV (Net Present Value), also called VAN in French, measures the value created by a project by discounting future cash flows to today and comparing them to the initial investment. On this page, you’ll find: definition, formula, example, interpretation, common mistakes, real-world use cases, and access to an NPV calculator.
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What is NPV? NPV formula Example Interpretation Use cases NPV FAQ
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What is NPV?

NPV (Net Present Value) measures how much value a project creates by converting future cash flows into today’s value using a discount rate.

It is widely used in finance, investment analysis, corporate projects and real estate, because it forces decisions to account for time, risk and opportunity cost.

Decision rule:
β€’ NPV > 0 β†’ value is created
β€’ NPV = 0 β†’ break-even project
β€’ NPV < 0 β†’ value is destroyed

NPV formula

The standard NPV formula is:

NPV = Ξ£ [ CF(t) / (1 + r)t ] βˆ’ Initial Investment
Where:
β€’ CF(t): cash flow at period t
β€’ r: discount rate
β€’ t: time period (usually years)
β€’ Initial investment: upfront cost

Simple NPV example

You invest $1,000 today. You expect $500 per year for 3 years. Your discount rate is 10%.

PV = 500/1.1 + 500/1.1Β² + 500/1.1Β³ β‰ˆ 1,243
NPV = 1,243 βˆ’ 1,000 = +243

The NPV is positive: the project creates value at a 10% required return.

How to interpret NPV correctly

NPV depends on the discount rate

A project can look attractive at 8% and unattractive at 15%. That’s not a flaw β€” it reflects different risk and return expectations.

NPV vs ROI

ROI shows overall profitability. NPV goes deeper by accounting for timing and risk. For long-term projects, NPV is often more reliable.

Common mistakes

Key idea: NPV does not predict the future β€” it forces you to be honest about your assumptions.

NPV in real-world decisions

NPV is used for investment analysis, real estate, capital budgeting, project selection, and long-term strategic decisions.

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Typical searches:
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β€’ NPV vs ROI

FAQ – NPV

What does a positive NPV mean?

It means the project creates value after accounting for time and risk.

How do I choose the discount rate?

It should reflect risk and your minimum acceptable return.

Is NPV better than IRR?

NPV gives value in currency. IRR gives a percentage. They are complementary.

If you want to make decisions based on value β€” not intuition β€” NPV is one of the most reliable tools available.

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