What If You Invested $1,000 in NVIDIA (NVDA)?

Enter any amount and start date. We use historical prices to show your hypothetical return.

NVIDIA Corporation logo
NVIDIA

NVDA

If I had invested

on this date

Available: Jan 22, 1999 to Mar 18, 2026

Historical extremes

What if you bought at the best or worst time? Check max profit, max drawdown, and total return since IPO.

Max profit

+666,069%

(6,662 times)

Buy
Apr 26, 1999
$0.03
Sell
Oct 29, 2025
$207.02

Buying NVDA at the best price and selling at the peak would have turned $1,000 into $6,661,691.8.

Max drawdown

89.72%

(fell to 10% of peak)

Peak
Jan 3, 2002
$0.54
Trough
Oct 9, 2002
$0.06

A $1,000 investment in NVDA at the peak would have shrunk to $102.77 at the trough.

Return since IPO

+482,724%

(4,828 times)

IPO
Jan 22, 1999
$0.04
Current
Mar 18, 2026
$180.4

A $1,000 investment in NVDA at IPO would be worth $4,828,238.88 today.

Frequently asked questions

What is NVIDIA (NVDA) stock's all-time high and all-time low?

NVIDIA (NVDA) stock's all-time low was $0.03 on Apr 26, 1999. The all-time high was $207.02 on Oct 29, 2025.

What if you invested $1,000 in NVIDIA (NVDA) stock for maximum profit?

Buying NVIDIA (NVDA) stock at the best price ($0.03 on Apr 26, 1999) and selling at the peak ($207.02 on Oct 29, 2025) would have turned $1,000 into $6,661,691.8. Historical return: +666,069.18% (6,662 times).

What are NVIDIA (NVDA)'s best buy and sell dates for maximum profit?

The best buy date for NVIDIA (NVDA) stock was Apr 26, 1999 at $0.03. The best sell date was Oct 29, 2025 at $207.02. This investment would have returned +666,069.18% (6,662 times).

What was NVIDIA (NVDA) stock's maximum drawdown?

NVIDIA (NVDA) stock's worst decline was 89.72% (fell to 10% of peak) from peak to trough. Peak: $0.54 on Jan 3, 2002. Trough: $0.06 on Oct 9, 2002. A $1,000 investment at the peak would have been worth $102.77 at the trough.

What if you bought NVIDIA (NVDA) stock at IPO?

A $1,000 investment in NVIDIA (NVDA) stock at IPO ($0.04 on Jan 22, 1999) would be worth $4,828,238.88 today. Historical return: +482,723.89% (4,828 times). Current stock price: $180.4 as of Mar 18, 2026.

What if you invested $1,000 in NVIDIA (NVDA) 5 years ago?

A $1,000 investment in NVIDIA (NVDA) stock 5 years ago ($12.69 on Mar 18, 2021) would be worth $14,215.92 today. Historical return: +1,321.59% (14.2 times). Current stock price: $180.4 as of Mar 18, 2026.

What if you invested $1,000 in NVIDIA (NVDA) 10 years ago?

A $1,000 investment in NVIDIA (NVDA) stock 10 years ago ($0.82 on Mar 18, 2016) would be worth $219,357.98 today. Historical return: +21,835.80% (219.4 times). Current stock price: $180.4 as of Mar 18, 2026.

What if you invested $1,000 in NVIDIA (NVDA) 20 years ago?

A $1,000 investment in NVIDIA (NVDA) stock 20 years ago ($0.37 on Mar 17, 2006) would be worth $487,277.83 today. Historical return: +48,627.78% (487.3 times). Current stock price: $180.4 as of Mar 18, 2026.

Data & methodology

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: the best buy and sell dates that maximize percentage return. Max drawdown: the largest peak-to-trough decline in price. Return since IPO: 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 dividend-adjusted closing prices from our data provider. The calculator and Historical extremes use the same data source for consistent results.

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 NVDA. You can select any date between our first and most recent data point.