NASDAQ 100 · DCA since 2005

$500/month in NASDAQ 100 since 2005

What a monthly $500 dollar-cost average into NASDAQ 100 would be worth today if you'd started in January 2005 and never stopped. Real adjusted closes, T+1 execution, no transaction fees modeled.

If you invested $500/month in NASDAQ 100 from 2005-01 to 2026-06...

$1,131,633

grown from $129,000 invested over 21.5 years. +$1,002,633 (+777.23%)

Growth over time

Dashed: cumulative invested · Solid: portfolio value

Investment schedule

Per investment
$500.00
Frequency
Monthly
Window
2005-01-01 → 2026-06-29
Duration
21.5 years
Number of investments
258
× $500.00 each

Results

Total invested
$129,000
258 × $500.00
Final value
$1,131,633
as of 2026-06-29
Total return
+$1,002,633
+777.23%
Annualized (IRR)
17.31%/yr
compounded over 21.5 years

What 2005 actually was: the calm before the storm

Starting a DCA in 2005 put you mid-cycle in a long bull run. Markets felt steady, housing was booming, and nothing about the next three years was obvious from where you stood. Then 2008 hit. The lesson of this start date is what happens when a DCA strategy meets a generational crash within a few years of opening the account, and then keeps going.

For a NASDAQ 100 DCA buyer who started January 2005 with $500 a month, the schedule pulled in 258 purchases through 2026-06-29. Total invested: $129,000. Final value: $1,131,633. That works out to an annualized return of 17.31% per year on the irregular cashflow series.

The numbers above use adjusted closing prices (dividends reinvested, splits applied) and apply a T+1 policy: when the 1st of the month landed on a weekend or holiday, the trade executed at the next trading day's close. Bitcoin pages execute on the exact scheduled date because crypto trades 24/7.

Change the numbers

Want to test a different amount, frequency, or end date? The full calculator has the same NASDAQ 100 dataset behind it.

Other NASDAQ 100 start years

Disclaimer: This page is for educational purposes only. It is not investment advice. Historical performance does not predict future results. Always do your own research.