What if you invested in Starbucks in 2020?
SBUX · Consumer · Data through 2026-06-01
If you invested $1,000 in Starbucks in 2020
The same $1,000 in the S&P 500 would be worth $2,540(+154%)
The S&P 500 returned $2,540 on the same $1,000. S&P 500 outperformed by $1,147.
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Compare Starbucks to another stock
See how Starbucks stacks up since 2020, head to head.
What if Starbucks keeps this up?
Project forward at Starbucks's 5.2% historical growth rate. See 5-30 year scenarios.
Growth of $1,000
Starbucks vs. S&P 500 vs. US Dollar, 2020 to present
Year-by-Year Returns
$1,000 invested in Starbucks starting January 2020
| Year | Price | Value | Annual |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | $73.36 | $1,000 | - |
| 2021 | $85.45 | $1,165 | +16.5% |
| 2022 | $88.21 | $1,202 | +3.2% |
| 2023 | $100.25 | $1,367 | +13.6% |
| 2024 | $87.24 | $1,189 | -13% |
| 2025 | $103.62 | $1,412 | +18.8% |
| 2026 | $90.83 | $1,238 | -12.3% |
What this return means
A $1,000 stake in Starbucks (SBUX) from 2020 sits at $1,393 today. The total return is +39.3% over 6.6 years, as of 2026-06-01.
That is only about 5.2% a year once you compound it across 6.6 years. A plain S&P 500 fund would have grown that $1,000 to about $2,540 instead, beating Starbucks by around $1,147. The index compounded at about 15.2% a year, a reminder that a single stock can lag a basket of them.
The year-by-year record shows how bumpy the ride was. The best single year was 2025 at +18.8%, and the worst was 2024 at -13.0%. These figures use split-adjusted closing prices and exclude dividends, taxes, trading fees, and inflation, so a real after-tax result would differ.
This is historical math, not financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
What if you invested $100 a month instead?
Most people do not drop a lump sum in on day one. They add a fixed amount every month. Putting $100 into Starbucks at the close of every month from January 2020 through June 2026 means 78 buys and $7,800 contributed over about 6.5 years.
$100/month, dollar-cost averaged
$9,315
+19.4% on $7,800 in
Same $7,800, all in at the start
$10,865
+39.3% on $7,800 in
Going all in at the start beat spreading the buys out by $1,550. That is the usual result when a stock trends up: each monthly buy pays a higher price than the last, so the average cost climbs. Averaging in also meant an average buy price of $85.57 per share across the whole stretch, so the monthly buyer never had to time a single low. Neither number counts dividends, taxes, or trading costs.
Illustrative fixed $100/month example, not a recommendation. Figures are computed from SBUX split-adjusted monthly closes through June 2026. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Starbucks at different times
See how the start year changes the outcome
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For informational and educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. All calculations are based on split-adjusted closing prices from Yahoo Finance and do not account for dividends, taxes, or trading fees. See our methodology and full disclaimer.