If you invested $100 in gold at the beginning of January 2001, you would have about $1,972.58 by March 2026. This is a return on investment of 1,872.58%, or 12.58% per year.
This investment beats inflation during this period for an inflation-adjusted return of about 945.99% cumulatively, or 9.78% per year.
The graph below shows the performance of $100 invested in gold over time.
The nominal return on investment of $100 is $1,872.58, or 1,872.58%. This means by March 2026 you would have $1,972.58 worth of gold.
However, it's important to take into account the effect of inflation when considering an investment. Gold is often considered a hedge against inflation, so let's see how it actually performed.
The CPI in January 2001 was 175.100 and the CPI in March 2026 was 330.213.
Adjusted for inflation, the $1,972.58 nominal end value would have a real return of roughly $945.99 in 2001 dollars. This means the inflation-adjusted return is 945.99% as opposed to the original 1,872.58%.
For more information on inflation, see our U.S. inflation calculator for 2001.
The table below shows the full dataset pertaining to a $100 gold investment over the 303-month period between 2001 and 2026.
Wondering how gold compares to the stock market? Use our S&P 500 calculator to compare returns over the same period.
Gold price data is sourced from CME Group gold futures contracts (GC) via Yahoo Finance. Inflation data is from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' monthly CPI logs.
in2013dollars.com is a reference website maintained by the Official Data Foundation.
|
Start Price
January 2001 | $268.40 |
|
End Price
March 2026 | $5,294.40 |
| Nominal return |
+1,872.58%
+12.58% / yr |
| Inflation-adjusted return |
+945.99%
+9.78% / yr |
|
Final amount, nominal ($100 base) | $1,972.58 |
|
Final amount, inflation-adjusted ($100 base) | $1,045.99 |