Investment ROI Calculator
Understanding Return on Investment (ROI)
Return on Investment (ROI) is a fundamental financial metric used to evaluate the efficiency and profitability of an investment. It measures how much profit or loss you've made relative to the amount of money you initially invested, expressed as a percentage.
ROI is crucial for comparing different investment opportunities, evaluating portfolio performance, making investment decisions, and tracking financial progress over time. A positive ROI indicates a profitable investment, while a negative ROI indicates a loss.
ROI Calculation Formulas
Basic ROI Formula
ROI = ((Current Value - Initial Investment) ÷ Initial Investment) × 100
Example:
Initial Investment: $10,000
Current Value: $12,500
ROI = (($12,500 - $10,000) ÷ $10,000) × 100 = 25%
ROI with Additional Costs
ROI = ((Current Value - Initial Investment - Additional Costs) ÷ Initial Investment) × 100
Example:
Initial Investment: $10,000
Current Value: $12,500
Additional Costs: $200 (fees)
ROI = (($12,500 - $10,000 - $200) ÷ $10,000) × 100 = 23%
ROI with Income/Dividends
ROI = ((Current Value + Income Received - Initial Investment - Costs) ÷ Initial Investment) × 100
Example:
Initial Investment: $10,000
Current Value: $11,000
Dividends Received: $800
ROI = (($11,000 + $800 - $10,000) ÷ $10,000) × 100 = 18%
Annualized ROI Formula
Annualized ROI = ((Current Value ÷ Initial Investment)^(1 ÷ Years)) - 1) × 100
Example:
25% return over 2 years
Annualized ROI = ((1.25)^(1÷2) - 1) × 100 = 11.8% per year
Examples
Example 1: Stock Investment
Initial Investment: $5,000
Current Value: $6,200
Dividends Received: $150
Trading Fees: $50
Total Return: $6,200 + $150 - $5,000 - $50 = $1,300
ROI: ($1,300 ÷ $5,000) × 100 = 26%
Example 2: Real Estate Investment
Initial Investment: $200,000 (down payment + closing costs)
Current Property Value: $280,000
Net Rental Income: $24,000 (3 years)
Total Return: $280,000 + $24,000 - $200,000 = $104,000
ROI: ($104,000 ÷ $200,000) × 100 = 52%
Annualized ROI: ~15% per year over 3 years
Example 3: Bond Investment
Initial Investment: $10,000
Current Value: $10,200
Interest Received: $600 (2 years)
Total Return: $10,200 + $600 - $10,000 = $800
ROI: ($800 ÷ $10,000) × 100 = 8%
Annualized ROI: 4% per year
ROI Benchmarks and Interpretation
📊 ROI Benchmarks
- S&P 500 Historical Average: ~10% annually
- Real Estate: 8-12% annually (including rental income)
- Bonds: 3-6% annually
- High-Yield Savings: 2-5% annually
- CDs: 3-5% annually
- Treasury Bills: 2-4% annually
- Inflation Rate: ~3% annually (to beat)
📈 ROI Interpretation
- Positive ROI: Investment gained value
- Negative ROI: Investment lost value
- High ROI: Potentially high risk/reward
- Consistent ROI: Stable investment
- Above-market ROI: Outperforming benchmarks
- Risk-adjusted ROI: Consider volatility
- Time factor: Longer periods may be less reliable
ROI Limitations and Considerations
⚠️ Limitations of ROI
- Time factor: ROI doesn't account for time without annualization
- Risk assessment: High ROI may indicate high risk
- Opportunity cost: Doesn't compare to alternative investments
- Inflation impact: Nominal vs. real returns
- Cash flow timing: When money flows in/out matters
- Tax implications: Pre-tax vs. after-tax returns
💡 Best Practices
- Compare annualized ROI for different time periods
- Consider risk-adjusted returns (Sharpe ratio)
- Include all costs (fees, taxes, maintenance)
- Compare to relevant benchmarks
- Consider inflation-adjusted (real) returns
- Evaluate consistency of returns over time
- Don't chase past performance