If I Invested $100 in S&P 500 in 2021, How Much Would I Have Today?

⏪ Historical Simulation · Indices
S&P 500 — 2021
$100 invested → held to today
$199
+98.8%  ·  1.99x your money
$100
Invested
$3,700.65
Price in Jan 2021
$7,357.49
Price today
Indices
Asset type

If you had invested $100 in S&P 500 at the start of 2021 and held until today, your investment would have grown to approximately $199 — a strong 98.8% return over roughly 5 years. In 2021, the index provided broad, diversified market exposure at low cost. This simulation uses actual historical closing prices from Yahoo Finance, not projections or estimates.

About S&P 500 in 2021

In January 2021, S&P 500 was priced at approximately $3,700.65. A bull market driven by fiscal stimulus, near-zero rates, and post-pandemic optimism. Many assets hit all-time highs. An investor who bought S&P 500 at this point and held without selling has seen a gain of 98.8% from that entry to today.

Frequently Asked Questions

Exactly how much would $100 in S&P 500 invested in 2021 be worth today?

Based on real historical price data, $100 invested in S&P 500 on January 1, 2021 would be worth approximately $199 today — a +98.8% return over 5 years. S&P 500 was priced around $3,700.65 in early 2021 and is currently around $7,357.49. This is calculated from actual closing prices, not an estimate.

Was 2021 a good time to invest in S&P 500?

2021 turned out to be a good time to invest in S&P 500 — long-term holders from that entry are up 99%. However, past performance never guarantees future results. Market timing is notoriously difficult, and most financial research shows that time in the market consistently beats timing the market. Consistent, long-term investing tends to outperform any attempt to pick the perfect entry point.

How can I invest in S&P 500 today?

You can invest in S&P 500 through low-cost index ETFs at any brokerage. For the S&P 500: VOO (Vanguard), SPY (State Street), or IVV (iShares). For the NASDAQ 100: QQQ or QQQM (Invesco). These ETFs carry very low annual fees (0.03%–0.20%) and are available through Fidelity, Schwab, Robinhood, and most online brokerages.