S&P 500 historical return calculator (1928–2024)
Enter an amount and a start year — see what a lump sum in the S&P 500 would be worth today with dividends reinvested and inflation stripped out. Data goes back to 1928, so you can model the Great Depression, the 1970s stagflation, 2000-dot-com, 2008-GFC, or the 2020 COVID crash.
Uses annual S&P 500 total return (with dividends reinvested) and CPI-U inflation, 1928–2024. Source: Damodaran (NYU Stern) + Shiller CAPE + BLS. Excludes fees, taxes, and bid/ask. Real return = nominal ÷ cumulative CPI.
The S&P 500 total return series (price change plus reinvested dividends) is the single most-cited investment benchmark in the world. But most "historical return" tools drop the dividend piece — inflating the negative message on price alone and understating what shareholders actually earned. This calculator uses total return, then subtracts CPI-U to show real (inflation-adjusted) growth in the initial year's purchasing power.
The compounding math is applied year-by-year to the actual annual return, not to a smoothed average. This matters because sequence-of-returns risk is real — a 1929 investor and a 1935 investor had wildly different first decades even though both eventually recovered. Our year-by-year chart lets you see the drawdowns instead of hiding them in an "annualized" number.
Long-run averages are misleading if you start near a peak or a trough. The 1970s stagflation cost investors most of a decade in real terms. Anyone who bought at year-end 1999 was under water in real terms until 2013. Anyone who bought at year-end 2008 got the fastest bull market in history. Pick your start year and see the actual path — not just the endpoint.
Frequently asked
How far back does S&P 500 data go?
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Are dividends reinvested?
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What is the average annual return of the S&P 500?
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How much would $10,000 invested in the S&P 500 in 1990 be worth today?
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Does this include fees?
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Historical returns are not indicative of future results. Excludes broker/ETF fees, taxes, and bid-ask spread. Data: Damodaran (NYU Stern), Shiller CAPE, BLS CPI-U. See our sources, editorial standards, and disclaimer.