Looking only at stock price is like grading a test but ignoring the bonus questions. Total return tells the real story of your investment performance.
Total Return = (Ending Price - Beginning Price + Dividends) / Beginning Price
Capital Gains
Change in stock price
+
Plus
Both components matter
Dividends
Cash payments received
Total return measures the actual gain or loss on an investment over a period of time. It includes two components: the change in the stock price (capital appreciation or depreciation) and any income received (dividends or interest).
Most stock charts and financial headlines show only the price return, which ignores dividends entirely. This significantly understates the performance of dividend-paying stocks and misleads investors about actual wealth creation.
Why This Matters
Since 1926, dividends have contributed approximately 40% of the S&P 500's total return. If you only look at price charts, you are missing nearly half of the market's historical gains.
Imagine you bought AT&T in January 2015 at $33.59 per share and checked the price in January 2020: it was $37.68. Looks like a modest 12% gain over 5 years.
Price Return Only
+12.2%
($33.59 to $37.68)
2.3% annualized
Total Return (with dividends)
+43.8%
Price gain + ~$10.20 in dividends
7.5% annualized
Dividends added 31.6 percentage points to the return. Looking at price alone would have made this look like a terrible investment.
Consider $10,000 invested in the S&P 500 in 1990. By 2024, the price-only return and total return tell dramatically different stories.
Price Return Only
~$140,000
14x your money
Total Return (dividends reinvested)
~$280,000
28x your money
Reinvested dividends roughly doubled your final wealth over 34 years. This is the power of total return thinking combined with compounding.
REITs like Realty Income often have modest price appreciation but significant dividend yields. Looking at price alone dramatically understates their value.
Realty Income has paid over 650 consecutive monthly dividends and increased its dividend over 120 times since going public. A stock chart that ignores dividends would make this REIT look mediocre -- but total return investors have been well rewarded with 13%+ annualized total returns since its 1994 IPO.
Get our free portfolio tracker template that calculates true total return including all dividend payments
Standard stock charts on Google, Yahoo Finance, and most brokerages show price only by default. A stock that paid 3-5% in annual dividends for 20 years will look much worse than it actually performed.
Fix: Look for the "adjusted close" or "total return" option on charting tools. On Yahoo Finance, use the "Adj Close" column in historical data.
People say "Amazon beat Coca-Cola over the last 20 years." That may be true on price, but Coca-Cola has paid billions in dividends during that period. The gap narrows significantly when you include total return. For some periods, high-dividend stocks actually win on a total return basis.
Fix: Always compare investments on total return. This is the only fair comparison.
Even when people account for dividends, they often forget the compounding effect. If you reinvest your dividends to buy more shares, those new shares also generate dividends, which buy even more shares. This snowball effect is enormous over decades.
Fix: Use a DRIP calculator to model the real compounding effect of reinvested dividends.
Total return is typically quoted before taxes and inflation. Your real after-tax, inflation-adjusted return is what actually matters for purchasing power. A 10% total return with 3% inflation and 2% taxes is really 5% in real terms.
Fix: Use our Investment Return Calculator to model returns with tax and inflation adjustments.
Calculate total return for any investment
Find your purchase price
Example: You bought 100 shares at $50 = $5,000 invested
Find the current price
Example: Stock is now $60. Your 100 shares are worth $6,000
Add up all dividends received
Example: $2.00/share/year x 3 years x 100 shares = $600 in dividends
Apply the formula
($6,000 - $5,000 + $600) / $5,000 = 32% total return over 3 years
Annualize it (optional)
32% over 3 years = approximately 9.7% annualized (use the formula: (1 + 0.32)^(1/3) - 1)
Breakdown of the 32% Total Return:
Capital gain:
+$1,000 (20%)
Dividends:
+$600 (12%)
Dividends contributed over a third of the total return. Looking at price only, you would have thought this was a 20% return instead of 32%.
Many retirees focus exclusively on dividend yield for income. But total return investing can be equally effective. Here is why:
Dividend-Only Approach
Total Return Approach
The best approach for most people is a blend: hold dividend stocks for reliable income, but evaluate all investments on total return. A stock yielding 2% with 10% annual price appreciation (12% total return) is better than a stock yielding 5% with 3% price growth (8% total return).
The S&P 500 has averaged roughly 10% annualized total return over the last century (about 7% after inflation). Anything consistently above 10% is excellent. Individual dividend stocks that deliver 8-12% total return (3-4% yield + 5-8% price growth) are performing well.
It depends on how it is calculated. Simple total return includes dividends as cash received. Total return with reinvestment assumes dividends are immediately used to buy more shares, which gives a higher number due to compounding. When comparing investments, make sure both use the same methodology.
Most brokerages show total return in your portfolio performance section. Fidelity, Schwab, and Vanguard all provide total return figures that include dividends. If your broker only shows gain/loss based on price, add your cumulative dividends received to get the true picture.
No. Total return is the cumulative percentage gain over a period (for example, 50% over 5 years). Annualized return converts that into a yearly rate (8.4% per year in this case). Annualized return is more useful for comparing investments held for different time periods.