CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate) is the single most important number in investing. It tells you the rate at which your money actually grew per year, after smoothing out the bumps. CAGR is how you compare wildly different investments — a stock, a fund, a real-estate flip — on equal footing.
CAGR Calculator
Convert any start-and-end investment value into an annualised compounding growth rate.
Compound Annual Growth Rate
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Why CAGR Beats Absolute Returns
If you tell someone your investment grew 200%, that sounds incredible — until they ask over how long. 200% over 2 years is a CAGR of 73%; over 20 years it’s just 5.6%. CAGR removes the time-confusion and gives you a per-year growth rate any investment can be compared against.
The CAGR Formula
Where FV is the final value, IV is the initial value, and n is the number of years. The result is expressed as a decimal (multiply by 100 for a percentage).
Worked Example
CAGR Limitations
- Only works for single in / single out. If you added or withdrew money mid-way, use XIRR instead.
- Hides volatility. A 10% CAGR could come from a smooth ride or a roller-coaster.
- Not a forecast. Past CAGR ≠ future CAGR.
Frequently Asked Questions
CAGR vs absolute return — what’s the difference?▾
CAGR vs IRR vs XIRR?▾
What’s a ‘good’ CAGR?▾
Can CAGR be negative?▾
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