What If You Invested $1,000 in Bank of America (BAC)?
Enter any amount and start date. We use historical prices to show your hypothetical return.
Historical extremes
Maximum profit (buy at all-time low, sell at peak), maximum drawdown (peak to trough), and total return from IPO to current price.
Max profit
+21107.71% (212.1 times)
- Buy
- Dec 20, 1974
- $0.27
- Sell
- Jan 6, 2026
- $57.25
Buying BAC at the all-time low and selling at the peak would have turned $1,000 into $212,077.1.
Max drawdown
-93.45% (fell to 7% of peak)
- Peak
- Oct 5, 2007
- $37.08
- Trough
- Mar 6, 2009
- $2.43
The worst decline for BAC was -93.45% (fell to 7% of peak) from peak to trough.
IPO to current
+3021.44% (31.2 times)
- IPO
- Feb 21, 1973
- $1.51
- Current
- Mar 16, 2026
- $47.06
A $1,000 investment in BAC at IPO would be worth $31,214.35 today.
Dollar amounts based on selected investment ($1,000)
Frequently asked questions
What is Bank of America (BAC) stock's all-time high and all-time low?
- Bank of America (BAC) stock's all-time low was $0.27 on Dec 20, 1974. The all-time high was $57.25 on Jan 6, 2026.
What if you invested $1,000 in Bank of America (BAC) stock at the all-time low?
- Buying Bank of America (BAC) stock at the all-time low ($0.27 on Dec 20, 1974) and selling at the peak ($57.25 on Jan 6, 2026) would have turned $1,000 into $212,077.1. Historical return: +21107.71% (212.1 times).
What are Bank of America (BAC)'s best buy and sell dates for maximum profit?
- The best buy date for Bank of America (BAC) stock was Dec 20, 1974 (all-time low at $0.27). The best sell date was Jan 6, 2026 at $57.25. This investment would have returned +21107.71% (212.1 times).
What was Bank of America (BAC) stock's maximum drawdown?
- Bank of America (BAC) stock's worst decline was -93.45% (fell to 7% of peak) from peak to trough. Peak: $37.08 on Oct 5, 2007. Trough: $2.43 on Mar 6, 2009. A $1,000 investment at the peak would have been worth $65.54 at the trough.
What if you bought Bank of America (BAC) stock at IPO?
- A $1,000 investment in Bank of America (BAC) stock at IPO ($1.51 on Feb 21, 1973) would be worth $31,214.35 today. Historical return: +3021.44% (31.2 times). Current stock price: $47.06 as of Mar 16, 2026.
What if you invested $1,000 in Bank of America (BAC) 5 years ago?
- A $1,000 investment in Bank of America (BAC) stock 5 years ago ($33.52 on Mar 16, 2021) would be worth $1,403.79 today. Historical return: +40.38% (1.40 times). Current stock price: $47.06 as of Mar 16, 2026.
What if you invested $1,000 in Bank of America (BAC) 10 years ago?
- A $1,000 investment in Bank of America (BAC) stock 10 years ago ($10.73 on Mar 16, 2016) would be worth $4,385.35 today. Historical return: +338.53% (4.39 times). Current stock price: $47.06 as of Mar 16, 2026.
What if you invested $1,000 in Bank of America (BAC) 20 years ago?
- A $1,000 investment in Bank of America (BAC) stock 20 years ago ($30.79 on Mar 16, 2006) would be worth $1,528.54 today. Historical return: +52.85% (1.53 times). Current stock price: $47.06 as of Mar 16, 2026.
About this data
- How does the investment calculator work?
- Enter an investment amount and a start date. We use historical stock prices to calculate how many shares you would have bought, then apply the current price to show your hypothetical portfolio value and return.
- What are Historical extremes?
- Max profit: buy at all-time low, sell at the highest price after. Max drawdown: the largest peak-to-trough decline in price. IPO to current: total return from IPO date to the latest price.
- What is Max drawdown?
- Maximum drawdown is the largest peak-to-trough decline in price. It shows the worst drop from any prior high to a subsequent low. Peak and Trough are the dates and prices at which this decline occurred.
- Does this include dividends?
- The calculator uses adjusted closing prices when available, which account for stock splits and dividends. For the most accurate results, we recommend using data that includes dividend adjustments.
- Where does the price data come from?
- Historical prices are from Yahoo Finance, adjusted for stock splits and dividends. We use adjusted close for all calculations.
- How are the dollar amounts in the cards calculated?
- The dollar amounts in Historical extremes use the investment amount you select in the calculator above (e.g. $1,000). They show what your investment would have been worth at the Buy/Peak/IPO date versus the Sell/Trough/Current date.
- What date range can I use?
- The available date range depends on our historical price data for BAC. You can select any date between our first and most recent data point.
