If you invested $1,000 in TXN — what it would be worth today
A $1,000 investment in Texas Instruments Incorporated (TXN) in January 2016 would be worth $8,248 as of July 2026 with dividends reinvested — 22.4% a year. Use the dropdowns above to try any amount, ticker, or starting month back to June 1972.
Over the same period, the same $1,000 would be worth $4,545 in the S&P 500 (SPY) and $7,377 in the Nasdaq-100 (QQQ). TXN beat both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq-100 over that period.
Growth of $1,000 in TXN since January 2016#
monthlyTexas Instruments Incorporated (TXN). Total return approximated via dividend- and split-adjusted closes (no taxes or fees). Not investment advice.
Growth of $1,000 in TXN by starting month#
$1,000 invested in TXN, by starting year#
| Invested in | Worth today | Same in QQQ | Multiple | Annualized |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | $8,248 | $7,377 | 8.2× | 22.4% |
| 2017 | $5,493 | $6,099 | 5.5× | 19.8% |
| 2018 | $3,605 | $4,444 | 3.6× | 16.5% |
| 2019 | $3,718 | $4,439 | 3.7× | 19.4% |
| 2020 | $2,938 | $3,380 | 2.9× | 18.3% |
| 2021 | $2,050 | $2,337 | 2.0× | 14.2% |
| 2022 | $1,848 | $2,015 | 1.8× | 14.9% |
| 2023 | $1,820 | $2,465 | 1.8× | 19.2% |
| 2024 | $1,952 | $1,730 | 2.0× | 31.9% |
| 2025 | $1,647 | $1,373 | 1.6× | 42.3% |
Methodology#
Investments are assumed made at the first trading day's close of the chosen year. "Dividends reinvested" uses split- and dividend-adjusted closes (a standard total-return approximation; taxes and fees excluded). "Price-only" uses split-adjusted closes. TXN data begins June 1972; values as of July 2026 and refresh daily. Past performance does not predict future returns; not investment advice.
See the live TXN chart and fundamentals on the TXN quote page or compare with the same investment in SPY.
FAQ
- How much would $1,000 invested in TXN be worth today?
- A $1,000 investment in Texas Instruments Incorporated (TXN) in January 2016 would be worth about $8,248 as of July 2026, with dividends reinvested. That works out to about 22.4% a year.
- How far back does the TXN calculation go?
- TXN data begins June 1972. You can pick any starting month from then to the present and see what your investment would be worth today.
- Does this include dividends?
- Yes. The default "dividends reinvested" view uses split- and dividend-adjusted closing prices — a standard total-return approximation that excludes taxes and fees. A price-only view (split-adjusted, no dividends) is also available.
