Use the ROI calculator to measure how much money you made or lost on an investment. ROI stands for Return on Investment.
ROI Calculator
Calculate your Return on Investment (ROI) and Annualized Growth
Common Questions About ROI
What is ROI?
What is Annualized ROI?
What is considered a “Good” ROI?
How does Inflation affect ROI?
Why include Fees and Taxes?
What Is an ROI Calculator
An ROI calculator measures how much money you made or lost on an investment. ROI stands for Return on Investment. This calculator takes your starting amount and ending amount, then shows your profit as a percentage. It also factors in costs like fees and taxes that eat into your gains, giving you a realistic picture of your actual returns.
Input Fields Explained in the ROI Calculator
Amount Invested
This is your starting capital. If you bought stock for $10,000 or put $50,000 into a rental property, that's your invested amount. Don't include any fees here—those go in a separate field. This number represents the pure capital you committed.
Amount Returned
Enter what you got back when you sold or cashed out. If you sold those stocks for $15,000 or your rental property for $65,000, put that here. This is the gross amount before considering any costs.
Investment Period
How many years have you held this investment? You can use decimals for partial years. If you held something for 18 months, enter 1.5. This helps calculate your annualized return, which shows your average yearly performance.
Total Fees
Include all transaction costs here. Brokerage fees when you bought and sold, real estate agent commissions, and transfer fees, add them all up. These reduce your actual profit and give you a more honest ROI number.
Tax Rate
Most investment profits get taxed as capital gains. The rate depends on how long you held the asset and your income level. Common rates are 0%, 15%, or 20% for federal taxes. Enter your combined rate if you also pay state taxes on investment gains.
Reading Your Results in the ROI Calculator
Total ROI
This percentage shows your complete return after all costs. A 50% ROI means you made half your investment back in profit. Negative numbers mean you lost money. This is your bottom-line performance metric.
Annualized ROI
This shows your average yearly return. It's useful for comparing investments you held for different time periods. A 30% total return over 5 years becomes about 5.4% per year. This helps you see if you beat standard benchmarks like the stock market average.
Net Profit
This is real money in your pocket after fees and taxes. If you invested $10,000 and this shows $3,500, you actually gained $3,500 in spendable cash. The color changes to red if you lost money and green if you made a profit.
Total Cost
This combines your initial investment plus all fees. It's important because your ROI is calculated based on everything you spent, not just the purchase price. Forgetting fees makes your returns look better than they really are.
Breakdown Chart
The doughnut chart splits your money into three parts. The gray section shows your original investment. The medium gray represents costs and taxes. The blue portion is your actual profit. This visual makes it easy to see how much of your returns got eaten by expenses.
Why This Matters
Knowing your true ROI helps you make better investment choices. You might think you're doing great until you account for all the hidden costs. Real estate, for example, has high transaction fees that can cut your returns significantly.
The annualized number lets you compare different types of investments fairly. You can see if your 3-year stock hold beat your 7-year bond investment when you look at yearly averages instead of total returns.
Tax planning becomes easier when you see how much capital gains eat into your profits. Sometimes holding an investment longer gets you better tax treatment, which this calculator helps you evaluate.
Tips for Accurate Results
Be honest about all your costs. Missing even small fees adds up over time and skews your calculations. Check your brokerage statements and closing documents for the exact numbers.
Use realistic tax rates. If you're not sure, search for current capital gains rates in your tax bracket. Some states add their own investment taxes on top of federal rates.
Compare your ROI to simple alternatives. Did you beat a basic index fund? Could you have made more in a high-yield savings account with zero risk? This context helps you judge if the effort was worth it.
Conclusion
This calculator turns investment results into concrete numbers. You'll know exactly how well your money performed after accounting for every cost. Use it before making new investments to set realistic expectations, and after selling to evaluate your choices. The difference between gross returns and net returns can be eye-opening.
