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If you'd put $1,000 in the Nasdaq 100 in January 2003…

…it would be worth about $16,390 today β€” roughly 16.4Γ— your money, about 12.8% a year. (price return only)

January 2, 2003March 10, 2026
$1,384.85Nasdaq 100 Index$22,697.10

How this is calculated

We take the closing price of the Nasdaq 100 on January 2, 2003 ($1,384.85) and the most recent close on March 10, 2026 ($22,697.10), a span of 23.2 years. The $1,000 grows in proportion to that price change.

This reflects the change in the index level only and excludes dividends. Including reinvested dividends, the total return would be meaningfully higher. Daily closing prices are sourced from public market data. Figures are nominal (not inflation-adjusted).

Common questions

Is this adjusted for inflation?

No. These are nominal figures β€” what the position would be worth in today's dollars, not adjusted for inflation. In real, inflation-adjusted terms the gain would be smaller.

Does this include dividends?

No. This tracks the price level of the Nasdaq 100 and excludes dividends. With dividends reinvested, the total return would be higher.

Could I have actually bought this?

You can't buy an index directly, but low-cost index funds and ETFs aim to track the Nasdaq 100. Real-world results would differ slightly because of fees, tracking error, and timing.

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Past performance does not predict future results. Historical figures are for illustration only and are not investment advice.