BCBetter Calculators

Crypto ROI Calculator

Calculate the return on investment (ROI) for any crypto trade.

🧮

Enter your values and click Calculate

How It Works

Net Profit = Current Value − Initial Investment − Fees. ROI = (Net Profit ÷ Initial Investment) × 100. Return Multiplier = Current Value ÷ Initial Investment. As a worked example: $1,000 invested, current value $4,500, $20 in fees. Net Profit = $4,500 − $1,000 − $20 = $3,480. ROI = ($3,480 ÷ $1,000) × 100 = 348%. Multiplier = $4,500 ÷ $1,000 = 4.5x. Note that ROI and the multiplier use slightly different denominators: ROI measures the net profit relative to the investment (accounting for fees), while the multiplier measures the gross value ratio. A 100% ROI (net profit equals the investment) corresponds to a 2x multiplier if fees are zero, or slightly less than 2x if fees reduce the net profit.

Examples

4.5x Return
$1,000 invested, now worth $4,500, $20 in fees.
Result: ROI: 348% — Net profit: $3,480 — 4.5x multiplier.
Altcoin Loss
$2,000 invested in an altcoin, now worth $800, $30 in fees.
Result: ROI: -61.5% — Net loss: -$1,230.
Moderate ETH Gain
$5,000 in ETH, now worth $8,000, $50 in fees.
Result: ROI: 59% — Net profit: $2,950 — 1.6x multiplier.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good crypto ROI?
There is no universal benchmark — Bitcoin has returned over 100x since its early years, while many altcoins have gone to zero. For context, broad stock market indices average 7–10% annually. A 50–100% annual return in crypto would be considered exceptional by any standard, but the volatility and risk required to achieve it is also exceptional. Short-term gains of 20–50% are possible in bull markets but are often followed by equivalent or larger losses.
How is crypto ROI different from stock ROI?
The mathematical formula is identical — both measure net profit as a percentage of the initial investment. The key differences are in magnitude and volatility: crypto assets routinely move 20–50% in a single month, whereas blue-chip stocks rarely move more than 5–10%. Crypto also lacks dividends, earnings, and valuation anchors that constrain stock prices, making extreme ROI outcomes — both positive and negative — far more common.
What fees should I include?
Include all transaction costs that reduced your net profit: exchange trading fees (maker/taker), withdrawal fees, and blockchain gas fees paid during entry or exit. For DeFi positions, include swap fees, gas costs, and any protocol fees paid during the investment period. Fees that were paid in crypto should be converted to USD at the time of payment for accurate inclusion.

Related Calculators