How much would I haveif…

If I'd invested in S&P 500 since 2008

$1,000 put into the S&P 500 at the end of 2008 would be worth about $8,220 today — a 8.22× return, or roughly 12.9% a year. Change the amount below to run your own number.

You'd have

$8,220

from $1,000 invested up 722%.

Multiple8.22×
Per year12.9%
In today's $$5,203
shares held11.08 shares
20082026

The story behind the number

Best year+13%2020
Worst year−13%2020
Steepest drop−25%2021→2022
vs gold1.72× aheadgold → $4,789

S&P 500 since 2008 has been a remarkably smooth ride. $1,000 put in at the end of 2008 grew to $8,220 — a 8.22× return, or about 12.9% a year. For contrast, gold — the classic play-it-safe alternative — turned the same $1,000 into $4,789 over the identical window.

The ride mattered as much as the destination. The strongest single year was 2020, up 13%; the worst was 2020, down 13%.

Holding on took nerve: the position fell as much as 25% from its 2021 peak to its 2022 low, before climbing back above that high by 2023. Inflation takes a bite, too — consumer prices rose about 58% over the period, so in today's money the result is closer to 5.20× what you put in.

Common questions

How much would I have if I'd invested $1,000 in S&P 500 in 2008?
$1,000 invested in the S&P 500 at the end of 2008 would be worth about $8,220 today — a 8.22× return, or roughly 12.9% per year.
What were the best and worst years for S&P 500 since 2008?
The best year was 2020, up about 13%. The toughest was 2020, when it fell about 13%. Across the window, 71 of 210 years finished lower than they started.
What was the biggest drop along the way?
The steepest decline was about 25%, from a peak in 2021 to a low in 2022, with the value recovering above its prior high by 2023.
Would I have done better in gold?
$1,000 in gold over the same window would be about $4,789, versus $8,220 in the S&P 500.

The chart above shows the whole journey, not just the destination. Try switching to a bit each year to see how spreading your buying would have changed the outcome — or skip the latte to find out what a small daily habit could have grown into instead.

Compare S&P 500 head-to-head since 2008

More S&P 500 scenarios

All S&P 500 years →

What else, since 2008?