Data refreshed 10 June 2026 – VTI historical return
What If You Invested $1,000 in VTI on 1 June 2015?
This standard WWIBWN scenario tracks what a $1,000 investment in the Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF on 1 June 2015 would be worth now.
Invested on 2015-06-01.
Adjusted historical close.
Latest available weekly close.
About 3.9x the original stake.
Quick Answer
If you had invested $1,000 in VTI on 1 June 2015 and left it invested, the position would now be worth an estimated $3,922.55.
VTI investors owned nearly the entire U.S. stock market. As large technology companies and thousands of smaller American businesses grew, the investment benefited without requiring individual stock selection.
The Investment Breakdown
| Measure | Result |
|---|---|
| Asset | Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI) |
| Start date used | 2015-06-01 |
| Amount invested | $1,000 |
| Adjusted entry price used | $91.2773 |
| Units bought | 10.9556 |
| Latest close used | $358.04 |
| Estimated value now | $3,922.55 |
| Estimated gain | $2,922.55 (292%) |
Methodology: For consistency, WWIBWN standard 2015 scenarios use 1 June 2015 as the starting date unless otherwise stated. IPO and launch-based scenarios use the relevant IPO, direct listing, launch or earliest available trading date. Figures are updated weekly using the latest available market data. This standard scenario uses 1 June 2015 and Yahoo Finance adjusted historical chart data. Adjusted close accounts for ETF distributions and corporate actions. It does not include tax, trading fees, FX movement, custody costs or slippage.
About the Asset
The Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF is designed to track the CRSP US Total Market Index, providing exposure to nearly the entire investable U.S. stock market.
VTI includes large, mid, small and micro-cap companies across major sectors. Its holdings include leading companies such as Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Alphabet and Meta alongside thousands of smaller businesses.
Why This Starting Date Matters
WWIBWN standard 2015 scenarios use 1 June 2015 for consistency. Artificial intelligence had not yet become a major investment theme, and many investors underestimated cloud computing, technology leadership and the resilience of the U.S. economy.
Investing in VTI provided exposure to all these trends without requiring investors to predict which companies would benefit most.
The Investment Journey
2015-2019: Quiet Compounding
The U.S. economy expanded steadily, corporate earnings grew and technology companies strengthened their market positions.
2020: The Covid Crash
Markets experienced one of the fastest declines in history. Investors who remained invested benefited from a remarkable recovery.
2021: New Highs
Digital services, ecommerce and cloud computing became more important as corporate profits surged.
2022: Inflation and Rising Rates
Inflation and rapidly rising interest rates pressured the broad market, showing that diversification reduces risk but does not eliminate it.
2023-Present: The AI Revolution
VTI automatically benefited as major holdings such as Nvidia, Microsoft and Meta gained from artificial intelligence growth.
What Drove Returns?
Broad Market Exposure
VTI owns thousands of companies across the U.S. economy.
Technology Leadership
Many of the world’s most valuable technology companies became major market-return contributors.
Diversification
Strong performers helped offset weaker businesses.
Economic Growth
Investors participated as American businesses expanded and generated profits.
Long-Term Compounding
Low costs and reinvested distributions allowed returns to compound over time.
Could You Have Seen It Coming?
Perhaps more than most WWIBWN scenarios. Investors could not know which company would dominate AI or become the biggest winner, but they did not need to know.
By owning the broad market, VTI investors bet that American businesses would continue growing over the long term.
Different Investment Amounts
| Initial Investment | Estimated Value Now |
|---|---|
| $100 | $392.26 |
| $500 | $1,961.28 |
| $1,000 | $3,922.55 |
| $5,000 | $19,612.75 |
| $10,000 | $39,225.51 |
Risks Along the Way
VTI investors experienced market crashes, recessions, inflation concerns, interest-rate shocks, political uncertainty and global economic disruptions. Broad diversification reduced company-specific risk but did not remove market risk.
Key Takeaways
VTI provides exposure to virtually the entire U.S. stock market. Long-term success does not require identifying individual winners, and broad diversification allows investors to participate in economic growth across thousands of companies.
Related Scenarios
What If You Invested $1,000 in SPY on 1 June 2015?
What If You Invested $1,000 in VOO on 1 June 2015?
What If You Invested $1,000 in QQQ on 1 June 2015?
What If You Invested $1,000 in SMH on 1 June 2015?
FAQ
What is VTI?
VTI is the Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF, which tracks nearly the entire investable U.S. stock market.
How is VTI different from SPY?
SPY tracks the S&P 500, while VTI includes large, mid, small and micro-cap U.S. companies.
How many companies does VTI hold?
VTI typically holds several thousand U.S. stocks, representing nearly the entire U.S. equity market.
Why do long-term investors like VTI?
It offers broad diversification, low costs and exposure to long-term U.S. economic growth.
Is VTI suitable as a single-fund portfolio?
Many investors use VTI as a portfolio core because it provides exposure to thousands of companies in one investment.
Data and Editorial Information
This scenario is generated from market data and reviewed for calculation consistency before publication.
Historical entry and latest prices come from Yahoo Finance chart data. Adjusted close is used where available to reflect splits, distributions and other corporate actions.
The latest available adjusted market close is used for the calculation.
$1,000 divided by the entry price gives the units bought. Units bought multiplied by the latest price gives the estimated current value.
10 June 2026. Latest price used: $358.04 from 2026-06-10.
Prepared and reviewed by WWIBWN for educational and historical context. Calculations exclude tax, fees and personal circumstances.
Read more about WWIBWN or report a possible data issue.
Important: WWIBWN is for education and historical context only. This is not financial advice, and past performance does not predict future returns.