ROI Calculator — Return on Investment | LazyTools

Free Finance Tool · India · US · Equity · Real Estate

ROI Calculator

Calculate total ROI, annualised return (CAGR), inflation-adjusted real return, post-tax gain and alpha vs benchmark. Free, instant.

💰 Investment details
Initial investment
Final value
Investment period (years)
📊 Adjustments
Inflation rate (%/yr)
Tax on gains (%)
Benchmark return (%/yr)
Total ROI45.0%₹45,000 gain on ₹1,00,000 over 3 years
Annualised ROI (CAGR)13.19%
Real ROI (after inflation)8.84%
Post-tax ROI11.87%
vs Benchmark (12%)+1.19% α
Net gain (after tax)₹40,500
Benchmark value₹1,40,493
PrincipalGain
📊 Year-by-year growth
YearValueGainAnnual ROIBenchmark
📊 Annualised ROI💹 Real & post-tax🏆 Alpha vs benchmark📅 Year-by-year table⚡ Instant

How to Calculate ROI

Enter initial investment, final value and the holding period in years. Furthermore, the inflation and tax fields produce real and post-tax returns. Additionally, the benchmark rate compares your actual return against a market index return.

  1. Enter initial investment and final valueUse the cost basis including brokerage, taxes and fees paid at entry. Furthermore, the final value should include dividends received and reinvested. Additionally, for real estate, include stamp duty, registration and renovation costs in the initial investment.
  2. Set the holding period in yearsAnnualised ROI normalises returns across different time horizons. Furthermore, comparing a 2-year and 5-year investment using simple total ROI is misleading. Additionally, annualised ROI equals CAGR — the compound annual growth rate of the investment.
  3. Enter inflation and tax ratesThe real ROI adjusts for inflation using the Fisher equation. Furthermore, long-term equity gain tax in India is 10% above ₹1 lakh. Additionally, US long-term capital gains tax ranges from 0% to 20% depending on total income.
  4. Set the benchmark rateThe benchmark is your hurdle rate or index return to compare against. Furthermore, 12% is a common benchmark for Indian equity (Nifty 50 long-run average). Additionally, 10.5% is the approximate S&P 500 long-run average including dividends.
  5. Read alpha versus the benchmarkAlpha is the return above the benchmark — positive alpha means outperformance. Furthermore, alpha of +1.19% annualised over 3 years represents meaningful outperformance. Additionally, consistent positive alpha over market cycles is the primary goal of active fund managers.

ROI Formula — Simple and Annualised

Simple ROI measures the total percentage gain on an investment. Furthermore, it does not account for the time taken to achieve that return. Additionally, annualised ROI (CAGR) normalises returns across different holding periods for fair comparison.

Simple ROI = (Final value − Initial value) ÷ Initial value × 100 Annualised ROI = (Final value ÷ Initial value)^(1/years) − 1 Real ROI = (1 + Nominal ROI) ÷ (1 + Inflation) − 1 Post-tax ROI = Annualised ROI × (1 − Tax rate on gains)
₹1,00,000 growing to ₹1,45,000 in 3 years: simple ROI = 45%. Furthermore, annualised ROI (CAGR) = 13.19% per year. Additionally, at 4% inflation, the real annualised return is 8.84% — the true purchasing power gain.

Simple ROI vs Annualised ROI — Why It Matters

A 100% simple ROI over 10 years is not better than 50% over 3 years. Furthermore, 100% over 10 years = 7.18% annualised. Additionally, 50% over 3 years = 14.47% annualised — twice as fast. Always use annualised ROI for cross-investment comparison.

InvestmentInitialFinalYearsSimple ROIAnnualised ROI
Stock A₹1L₹2L10100%7.18%
Stock B₹1L₹1.5L350%14.47%
Stock C₹1L₹3L8200%14.72%
FD (7%)₹1L₹1.61L761%7.00%

Real ROI — Inflation-Adjusted Returns

Nominal returns include inflation's effect. Furthermore, a 10% return when inflation runs at 6% produces only 3.77% real purchasing power gain. Additionally, long-term investors must compare returns to inflation to measure true wealth creation.

India's retail inflation (CPI) has averaged 5–6% over the past decade. Furthermore, equity investments producing 12% nominal returns create 6–7% real returns. Additionally, fixed income returns at 7–8% nominal barely keep pace with inflation after tax, often producing near-zero real returns.

Reference: RBI Annual Report — inflation data | US Bureau of Labor Statistics — CPI | SEBI — equity market performance data.

ROI on Different Asset Classes

Asset classTypical nominal ROI (India)Typical nominal ROI (US)Liquidity
Large-cap equity12–15% (Nifty 50 avg)10–11% (S&P 500 avg)High
Mid/small-cap equity15–20% (long-run)11–13%Medium
Residential property6–10% (excl. rent)5–8% (excl. rent)Low
Gold8–10% (10yr avg)6–8%Medium
Fixed deposits6.5–8%4.5–5.5% (CDs)High (with lock-in)
Government bonds7–7.5%4–4.5%Medium

Capital Gains Tax and Post-Tax ROI

India taxes long-term capital gains (LTCG) at 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh per year. Furthermore, short-term capital gains (STCG) on equity are taxed at 20%. Additionally, equity mutual fund LTCG applies for holdings above 12 months with indexation not available for equity.

US long-term capital gains tax is 0%, 15% or 20% depending on total taxable income. Furthermore, assets held over 12 months qualify for long-term rates. Additionally, short-term capital gains in the US are taxed as ordinary income up to 37%.

India: Income Tax Department India — LTCG and STCG rates. US: IRS Topic 409 — Capital Gains and Losses. Rates may change — consult a tax advisor for your specific situation.

Alpha — Measuring Performance Against Benchmark

Alpha measures the excess return over a benchmark after adjusting for risk. Furthermore, a positive alpha means the investment outperformed its benchmark. Additionally, consistently generating positive alpha is difficult — most active fund managers underperform their benchmark over 10-year periods.

SEBI AMFI data shows that fewer than 30% of large-cap active funds beat the Nifty 50 index over a rolling 10-year period. Furthermore, this makes index fund investing (zero alpha target) a rational strategy. Additionally, the alpha displayed in this calculator is simple annualised outperformance, not risk-adjusted alpha.

Negative ROI — How to Interpret Losses

Negative ROI means the investment returned less than the initial cost. Furthermore, a -20% ROI over 2 years means the investment lost 20% of its value. Additionally, annualised negative ROI shows the annual rate of loss — useful for assessing how quickly to exit deteriorating investments.

The most dangerous framing error is comparing a positive nominal return to a negative real return. Furthermore, a 4% FD return with 6% inflation represents a -1.9% real return. Additionally, money in a savings account earning 3% against 5% inflation is losing purchasing power every year.

Frequently Asked Questions

ROI = (Final value − Initial value) ÷ Initial value × 100. Furthermore, annualised ROI (CAGR) = (Final/Initial)^(1/years) − 1. Additionally, real ROI adjusts for inflation using the Fisher equation.
Depends on asset class and risk. Furthermore, equity investments should beat inflation by at least 5–7% in real terms. Additionally, the Nifty 50 has averaged approximately 12–14% nominal returns over 20 years.
Simple ROI is the total percentage gain without time weighting. Furthermore, CAGR (annualised ROI) is the equivalent annual compound rate. Additionally, CAGR is the correct metric for comparing investments held over different time periods.
Alpha is the excess return over a benchmark. Furthermore, positive alpha means the investment outperformed its risk-adjusted benchmark. Additionally, most active fund managers fail to generate consistent positive alpha over 10-year periods.
Real ROI = (1 + nominal rate) ÷ (1 + inflation rate) − 1. Furthermore, a 10% nominal return with 5% inflation produces approximately 4.76% real return. Additionally, long-term investors must focus on real returns to measure true wealth creation.
LTCG on equity above ₹1.25 lakh per year is taxed at 12.5% for holdings above 12 months. Furthermore, STCG on equity is taxed at 20%. Additionally, debt fund gains are taxed at applicable income tax slab rates.
Always use annualised ROI (CAGR) for fair comparison. Furthermore, adjust for inflation and tax to get the real post-tax return. Additionally, compare against a relevant benchmark to measure relative performance.
Approximately 10–11% annualised including dividends over the long run. Furthermore, this varies significantly by starting and ending periods. Additionally, the past 10 years have produced above-average returns near 13–15%.

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