Snowballr provides financial education, not investment advice. Verify any advisor on FINRA BrokerCheck.
S&P 500 · Historical time machine

If you invested $5,000 in the S&P 500 in 2013

Direct answer

$5,000 invested in the S&P 500 at the start of 2013 — with dividends reinvested and held through end of 2024 — would be worth $25,333 nominal, or $18,542 in 2013 purchasing power. That's 14.48% annualized nominal return, or 11.54% real return, over 12 years.

Last reviewed July 2, 2026Fact-checked against primary sourcesEditorial standards
Coverage: Compound interest · Retirement · FIRE · Debt payoff · Mortgages · Fraud prevention
Built from: IRS · FINRA · SEC · BLS · Federal Reserve · Freddie Mac30+ primary sources verified
Nominal value
$25,333
In 2013 dollars
$18,542
Annualized nominal
14.48%
Annualized real
11.54%

How this was computed

We take the S&P 500 total return series (price change plus dividends reinvested at year-end) from start of 2013 through end of 2024 — a 12-year window — and apply the actual year-by-year return to a starting balance of $5,000. The nominal figure of $25,333 reflects the market value in 2024 dollars. The real figure of $18,542 strips out cumulative CPI-U inflation over the same window, expressing the end value in terms of 2013 purchasing power.

Total multiplier: 5.07× nominal (real: 3.71×). Cumulative CPI-U inflation over the window: 1.37× — meaning one 2013 dollar buys 0.73 2024 dollars of goods.

What this scenario captures

Every rolling multi-decade window contains its own crisis and recovery. The 12-year window starting 2013 includes the market events of that era — bull runs, drawdowns, monetary regime changes, and inflation cycles — all baked into the compounded number. Long-run S&P 500 real return since 1928 has averaged roughly 6.9%; the 11.54% realized in this specific window exceeded that average.

What the calculation excludes

  • ETF or mutual fund expense ratios (VOO 0.03%, SPY 0.09%, IVV 0.03%)
  • Taxes on dividends (typically 15-20% qualified rate) — inside a Roth IRA or taxable-account brokerage account with reinvested dividends the drag matters
  • Bid/ask spread and transaction costs
  • Behavioral realities — real investors rarely hold through the worst drawdowns without selling

Try a different scenario

This page precomputes the S&P 500 outcome for $5,000 starting in 2013. For a custom scenario, use our interactive tool:

Open the S&P 500 time machine →

Related scenarios

Historical returns are not indicative of future results. Data: Damodaran (NYU Stern), Shiller CAPE, BLS CPI-U. See our sources, editorial standards, and disclaimer.