Future Value Stock Calculator

Project stock value from growth, dividends, and recurring investments. See yearly estimates and return breakdowns. Test assumptions before making disciplined long-term portfolio decisions today.

Calculator Inputs

Starting dollar amount invested today.
Used to estimate initial and future share count.
Assumed yearly stock price appreciation.
Current yield based on portfolio value.
Annual increase assumed for dividend yield.
Projection horizon in years.
Amount added on each contribution date.
Controls when extra capital is invested.
Useful for ETFs, funds, or managed products.
Applied before dividends are reinvested or paid out.
Used to estimate real purchasing power.
Turn on DRIP-style compounding or take dividends in cash.
Reset

Example Data Table

This example uses the calculator’s default-style scenario to demonstrate how the output is structured.

Example Input or Output Value
Initial Investment$10,000.00
Current Share Price$50.00
Expected Annual Price Growth9.00%
Annual Dividend Yield2.20%
Dividend Growth Rate4.00%
Years15.0
Contribution$250.00 Monthly
Expense Ratio0.15%
Dividend Tax Rate15.00%
Inflation Rate2.50%
Reinvest DividendsYes
Projected Future Value$168,646.63
Inflation-Adjusted Value$116,444.69
Ending Share Price$182.12
Ending Shares925.9983
Total Invested$55,000.00
Total Profit$113,646.63

Formula Used

1) Share price growth

Monthly Growth Rate = (1 + Annual Growth Rate)^(1 / 12) - 1

Future Share Price(t) = Current Share Price × (1 + Monthly Growth Rate)^t

2) Initial share count

Initial Shares = Initial Investment ÷ Current Share Price

3) Dividend model

Dividend Yield(t) = Starting Dividend Yield × (1 + Dividend Growth Rate)^Years Elapsed

Gross Dividend(t) = Portfolio Value(t) × Dividend Yield(t) ÷ 12

Net Dividend(t) = Gross Dividend(t) × (1 - Dividend Tax Rate)

4) Reinvestment and contributions

New Shares from Contribution = Contribution Amount ÷ Share Price

New Shares from DRIP = Net Dividend ÷ Share Price

5) Expense adjustment

Monthly Fee Rate = Annual Expense Ratio ÷ 12

Fee(t) = Portfolio Value(t) × Monthly Fee Rate

6) Final portfolio value

Future Value = Ending Shares × Ending Share Price

Real Value = Future Value ÷ (1 + Inflation Rate)^Years

This model is scenario-based. It estimates value from your assumed price growth, dividend behavior, tax drag, fees, and contributions. It is not a discounted cash flow engine and should be treated as a planning calculator, not a guarantee.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your current investment amount and the stock’s present share price.
  2. Add an annual growth estimate for share price performance.
  3. Enter dividend yield and expected dividend growth if the stock pays income.
  4. Set the number of years you want to project.
  5. Add regular contributions and choose monthly, quarterly, or yearly timing.
  6. Include expense ratio, dividend tax rate, and inflation for a more realistic projection.
  7. Choose whether dividends are reinvested or taken in cash.
  8. Press Calculate Future Value to show the result block above the form, review the graph, and export your data to CSV or PDF.

FAQs

1) What does this calculator estimate?

It projects a stock position’s future value using price growth, dividend yield, dividend growth, taxes, fees, inflation, and scheduled contributions. It is a planning model, not a market prediction or guarantee.

2) The value of a stock at any time depends on its expected stream of future earnings.

Yes. In valuation theory, a stock reflects the present value of expected future owner benefits, often tied to earnings, cash flow, or dividends. Market prices also move with risk, rates, growth expectations, and investor sentiment.

3) How to calculate future value of a stock with dividends?

Start with current investment value, grow the share price by the assumed return, add new contributions, and include net dividends. If dividends are reinvested, they buy extra shares, which can create additional compounding over time.

4) What is DRIP and why does it matter?

A dividend reinvestment plan uses dividend cash to buy more shares instead of paying it out. That increases share count over time and can noticeably raise long-range portfolio value when assumptions remain favorable.

5) Why include dividend tax rate?

Taxes reduce the amount of dividend cash you actually keep or reinvest. Modeling tax drag makes the future value estimate more realistic, especially for income-focused holdings in taxable accounts.

6) Why include an expense ratio?

If you hold the stock through a fund or fee-based product, expenses can reduce long-term growth. Even small annual fees compound negatively because they lower the asset base every year.

7) Can I model monthly contributions?

Yes. Choose monthly, quarterly, or yearly contributions. The calculator adds each scheduled amount during the projection, then updates share count, dividends, fees, and portfolio value through the remaining months.

8) Are the results guaranteed?

No. Stocks do not grow in straight lines, dividends can change, and tax rules vary. Use the output as a scenario estimate for comparison, not as guaranteed financial advice or a promised outcome.

Related Calculators

market cap valuation

Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.