$1,000 in Monero in 2017
A $1,000 investment in Monero (XMR) made in January 2017 would be worth about $27,482 as of May 2026 (latest complete month) — a ×27 return, or +42.6% per year. Adjusted for US inflation (CPI), that equals $20,046 in 2017 dollars. The same $1,000 in the S&P 500 with dividends reinvested would have grown to $3,752.
In plain terms: after stripping out +37.1% US inflation since January 2017, today's $27,482 buys roughly what $20,046 bought back in 2017 — a ×20 gain in actual purchasing power.
Monero is the leading privacy coin: transactions hide sender, receiver and amount by default. Launched in 2014, XMR has survived repeated exchange delistings driven by regulation — a constraint on liquidity that has never quite killed the persistent demand for private money.
Data as of · updated weekly
The actual numbers: Monero since 2017
| XMR price in January 2017 | $13.80 |
| XMR price as of May 2026 | $379.28 |
| Nominal return | ×27 (+42.6%/yr) |
| US CPI inflation since January 2017 | +37.1% |
| Real (inflation-adjusted) return | ×20 (+37.9%/yr) |
| Same money in the S&P 500 | $3,752 |
Methodology: start-of-month prices, one-time purchase, no fees or taxes assumed. Full methodology.
What happened in 2017
2017 was the ICO mania: Bitcoin ran from $1,000 to nearly $20,000 by mid-December and thousands of tokens raised money on whitepapers alone. Buying in January caught the full bubble; buying in December caught the top.
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Monero vs S&P 500 total return vs uninvested cash eroded by CPI. Monthly grid, start-of-month prices.
FAQ: Monero returns since 2017
How much would $1,000 invested in Monero in 2017 be worth today?
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Monero in other years
Other assets in 2017
Educational purposes only — not investment advice and not a recommendation to buy or sell any asset. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Calculations assume a one-time purchase at the start-of-month price, no fees, no taxes and no selling.