Stock Total Return and Dividend Calculator (2024)

Below is a stock return calculator and ADR return calculator which automatically factors and calculates dividend reinvestment (DRIP). Additionally, you can simulate daily, weekly, monthly, or annual periodic investments into any stock and see your total estimated portfolio value on every date.

There are thousands of American stocks and ADRs in the database. Data is accurate to within the last 7 days.

Stock Total Return and Dividend Reinvestment (DRIP) Calculator

Note: The calculator does not account for spin-offs. Split adjustments happen within a week. New listings and ticker changes may take longer.

Table of Contents show ▼

How To Use the Dividend Calculator (DRIP)

To begin, you need to enter at least a stock ticker. As you type, it will search through legal stock tickers to help you complete the field and explore the set.

Basic Stock Details and Inputs

Stock Total Return and Dividend Calculator (1)
  • Stock Ticker: Enter a valid, active stock ticker [ZIP] from Tiingo
  • Starting Amount ($): Enter an initial investment amount, in dollars
  • Starting Date: Enter when an investment was first made*
  • Ending Date: Enter when an investment was sold*

° Depending on the stock data, we might adjust the starting and ending date. Check carefully after modeling a scenario.

Advanced Dividend and Periodic Investment Options

Stock Total Return and Dividend Calculator (2)

Click the 'Toggle Advanced' button to open the advanced stock options panel.

  • Show Events: Check the box for a listing of every dividend on that ticker in our database. If you choose to simulate periodic investments, they will be added as well.
  • Periodic Investments: Select the box to create a reinvestment scenario for a given ticker.
  • "Monthly": If you are simulating periodic investments, select how often you would have invested in the stock.
  • Regular Amount: The amount invested every period selected from the left pull-down below it. (Such as in a DRIP or Dividend Reinvestment Plan)

Interpreting Portfolio Model Results

Stock Total Return and Dividend Calculator (3)
  • Final Value ($): The value of the investment on the 'Ending Date'.
  • Annual Return: Our estimate to the annual percentage return by the investment, including dollar cost averaging. (Also see our compound annual growth calculator)
  • Graph: The value of the stock investment over time. Note – if you are on desktop – you can drag over the graph to see the value of the portfolio on any day.

How do the periodic stock investments work?

The tool attempts to time dividends based upon the ex-dividend date of stocks in our database. Where the tool sees a dividend, it invests at the daily open price. All other prices in the tool, such as the final portfolio value and daily updates, are based on close price.

When you choose to model periodic investments, the tool in shorthand invests every 1, 7, 30, or 365 days, respectively. (Read: no accounting for leap years!). Where we register a dividend and investment on the same day, the investment goes in at the open price but (as you'd expect), it doesn't factor into the dividend amount.

Does this tool perform stock valuation?

Remember, "past performance is no guarantee of future results"!

If you see a previously successful investment (maybe especially if you do!), don't extrapolate gains to the sky.

Stock valuation is art more than science. Value investors try to model a fair value based on the characteristics of the company – especially financials and cash flows. Along value lines, we have a few tools for you to attempt to value stocks:

  • A Graham Number Calculator which uses Benjamin Graham's method to estimate a fair price.
  • A Discounted Cash Flow Calculator which uses estimated future earnings or cash flow growth to estimate the fair value of a stock or investment.
  • A Dividend Discount Model Calculator which also estimates net present value like the DCF calculator, but uses dividend history and growth instead.

There are no guarantees in stock valuation - it's hard to predict the future. However, those tools might help point you in the right direction.

Source and Methodology of the Stock Total Return Calculator

The tool uses the Tiingo API on the backend. Tiingo is a paid API provider, so we have some (light) limitations in place:

  • Stock data may be up to 7 days old.
  • There are rate limits in place for your usage:
    • Maximum 50 scenarios per day
    • Maximum 10 scenarios per minute
  • The tool doesn't – and can't – account for spinoffs

Limitations and Disclaimers

The stock total return calculated is idealized, based on closing prices and unrealistic dividend timing, and will never match exact returns.

The tool is for informational purposes only and we cannot warrant the results. Verify any information you gather from this tool on your own. Treat the stock data as initial research.

We are not modeling taxes, management fees, dividend payment timing, slippage, and other sources of error. It is possible that the dataset contains errors as well.

Bug Reports, Feature Requests, and Requests to Help with the Stock Total Return Calculator

Let me know if you find a bug. Include which ticker caused the issue so I can debug the data.

As for enhancements: outside of ads, I'm not compensated to build and maintain this tool. If you have significant feature requests, make a contracting inquiry.

We wish we could help you with your stock research questions. Unfortunately, we have to stress that this information is for informational and research purposes only. We will not respond to requests to provide investment returns in a legal capacity. We can only help you with research inquiries.

(You probably need a professional known as a "forensic accountant" for legal purposes.)

Musings on the Any Stock Dividend Reinvestment Calculator

We originally built a version of this stock total return calculator for DQYDJ's five year anniversary (and 749th published article). That was in 2014.

Years into the tool (and even more into some of our others) we continue to stress that you need to produce fair, dividend reinvested return comparisons when discussing investments. That means this tool aligns philosophically with the other dividend reinvestment tools we have elsewhere on the site.

Try comparing your results to one of these (with inflation adjustments turned off):

  • Dow Jones Industrial Average Calculator
  • ETF and CEF Return Calculator
  • Wilshire 5000 Calculator
  • 10-Year Treasury Calculator
  • Any House Return Calculator (Seeded with median prices)
  • Bitcoin Return Calculator (Yep...)
  • Mutual Fund Return Calculator

As for styles of investing, we think the best thing to do with a windfall is so invest a lump sum. For investing from your paycheck, we suggest dollar cost averaging. To model a future investment, use the investment calculator.

Adjust Your Returns for Total Returns

Even though we've been fighting this battle for years, price returns still get all the press.

Price is only one element of return, however. Stocks payout dividends in dollars per share or in new shares of stock; simply quoting price returns misses a real (and significant!) portion of total returns.

It is especially egregious when companies pay special dividends. These can be massive payouts that (if ignored) would look like a massive overnight loss.

With this calculator, skip the half-truths and run your scenarios directly. All you need to provide is a ticker and some dates, and we'll do the total return math for you.

We hope you enjoy the any stock dividend reinvestment calculator. If you see articles quoting price returns on dividend paying stocks - send them our way, deal?

Stock Total Return and Dividend Calculator (4)

PK

PK started DQYDJ in 2009 to research and discuss finance and investing and help answer financial questions. He's expanded DQYDJ to build visualizations, calculators, and interactive tools.

PK lives in New Hampshire with his wife, kids, and dog.

Stock Total Return and Dividend Calculator (2024)

FAQs

How do you calculate stock returns including dividends? ›

To calculate the total return on investment for a stock that pays dividends, you have to combine the dividend yield with the capital gains yield or loss of the stock. To calculate the dividend yield, you must divide the annual dividends for a stock by the original price of the stock.

How do you calculate how much a stock will pay in dividends? ›

For example, if a stock is trading at $50 per share, and the company pays a quarterly dividend of 20 cents per share. That company's dividend would be 80 cents. Divide 80 cents by $50 per share to arrive at a dividend yield of 1.6%.

How do you calculate TSR? ›

Total Shareholder Return = “(Change in Stock Price + Dividends Paid)/Beginning Stock Price” where “Dividends Paid” means the total of all dividends paid on one (1) share of stock during the Performance Cycle.

How much money do I need to invest to make $3,000 a month? ›

Imagine you wish to amass $3000 monthly from your investments, amounting to $36,000 annually. If you park your funds in a savings account offering a 2% annual interest rate, you'd need to inject roughly $1.8 million into the account.

Do total returns include dividends? ›

Total return is the actual rate of return of an investment or a pool of investments over a period. Total return includes interest, capital gains, dividends, and realized distributions.

What is the formula for total stock return? ›

The formula for calculating TSR is { (current price - purchase price) + dividends } ÷ purchase price. TSR represents an easily understood figure of the overall financial benefits generated for stockholders.

How much to invest to get $1000 a month in dividends? ›

In a market that generates a 2% annual yield, you would need to invest $600,000 up front in order to reliably generate $12,000 per year (or $1,000 per month) in dividend payments. How Can You Make $1,000 Per Month In Dividends? Here are the steps you can take to build yourself a sufficient dividend portfolio.

How much stock do I need to make 500 a month in dividends? ›

With a 10% yield and monthly payout schedule, you can get to $500 a month with only $60,000 invested. That is, $6,000 per year paid on a monthly basis. Unfortunately, most stocks don't have yields anywhere near 10%. Many do have high enough yields to get you to $500 a month with diligent savings, but don't pay monthly.

What is the best way to calculate dividends? ›

The formula is as follows:
  1. Annual Dividends = Dividend Payment Per Period * Dividend Frequency.
  2. Dividend Yield = Annual Dividends / Current Share Price.
  3. Dividend Yield = (Dividend Payment Per Period * Dividend Frequency) / Current Share Price.
Dec 7, 2022

What is TSR ratio? ›

TSR is calculated by taking the sum of all capital gains and dividends produced over a specified period, then dividing it by the original investment amount.

What is the TSR percentage? ›

Total shareholder return (TSR) (or simply total return) is a measure of the performance of different companies' stocks and shares over time. It combines share price appreciation and dividends paid to show the total return to the shareholder expressed as an annualized percentage.

What is the TSR of a share return? ›

TSR calculates the return for a buy-and-hold investor over a specified period by considering the effects of stock price changes and dividends. Over one year, for example, a stock that begins at $100, ends at $110, and pays a $2 dividend has a TSR of 12%: (10 + 2) / 100 = 12%.

What if I invest $200 a month for 20 years? ›

Investing as little as $200 a month can, if you do it consistently and invest wisely, turn into more than $150,000 in as soon as 20 years. If you keep contributing the same amount for another 20 years while generating the same average annual return on your investments, you could have more than $1.2 million.

How to make 3k a month in dividends? ›

A well-constructed dividend portfolio could potentially yield anywhere from 2% to 8% per year. This means that to earn $3,000 monthly from dividend stocks, the required initial investment could range from $450,000 to $1.8 million, depending on the yield.

How long to become a millionaire investing $1,000 a month? ›

If you invest $1,000 per month, you'll have $1 million in 25.5 years.
Monthly contributionTime to reach $1 million with an 8% annual return
$50033.3 years
$1,00025.5 years
$2,50016.3 years
$5,00010.6 years
1 more row
Nov 20, 2023

How much can I make if I invest $100 a month? ›

Investing $100 per month, with an average return rate of 10%, will yield $200,000 after 30 years. Due to compound interest, your investment will yield $535,000 after 40 years. These numbers can grow exponentially with an extra $100. If you make a monthly investment of $200, your 30-year yield will be close to $400,000.

How much do I need to invest to make $1 million in 5 years? ›

Saving a million dollars in five years requires an aggressive savings plan. Suppose you're starting from scratch and have no savings. You'd need to invest around $13,000 per month to save a million dollars in five years, assuming a 7% annual rate of return and 3% inflation rate.

How much do I have to invest to make $5000 a month? ›

To generate $5,000 per month in dividends, you would need a portfolio value of approximately $1 million invested in stocks with an average dividend yield of 5%. For example, Johnson & Johnson stock currently yields 2.7% annually.

How much money can I make if I invest $1,000 a month? ›

Investing $1,000 a month for 20 years would leave you with around $687,306. The specific amount you end up with depends on your returns -- the S&P 500 has averaged 10% returns over the last 50 years. The more you invest (and the earlier), the more you can take advantage of compound growth.

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