3 Top Quantum Computing Stocks to Buy in 2025: The Ultimate Portfolio Boosters
Quantum leaps ahead: These three stocks are rewriting the rules of computational power—and investor returns.
Quantum supremacy meets market dominance
Forget yesterday's tech plays. Quantum computing doesn't just edge forward—it vaults past classical limitations. These companies aren't building better mousetraps; they're engineering entirely new species of predators.
The pure-play powerhouse
One name keeps surfacing in lab conversations and boardrooms alike. Their qubit stability? Unmatched. Patent portfolio? Bulletproof. They're not just riding the quantum wave—they're generating the tidal forces.
The semiconductor sleeper
While everyone watches flashy startups, this chip giant quietly corners the hardware market. Quantum processors need specialized components—and this veteran delivers at scale. Old-school manufacturing meets next-gen demand.
The enterprise dark horse
Cloud-based quantum access is becoming corporate candy. This firm's platform lets Fortune 500 companies experiment without billion-dollar lab investments. They monetize the curiosity—before clients even know what to build.
Wall Street's still pricing these like regular tech stocks—as if quantum advantage is just another SaaS metric. Meanwhile, the actual tech renders traditional valuation models about as useful as abacuses.
Image source: Getty Images.
1. Alphabet
(GOOG 2.98%) (GOOGL 3.10%) is best known as the company behind Google Search, Google Cloud, YouTube, Android, and Chrome. However, its Google Quantum AI unit ranks among the leaders in quantum computing.
In 2019, Google Quantum AI announced that it had achieved quantum supremacy. This term refers to a quantum computer solving a problem that's impossible for a classical computer to handle in a practical amount of time.
Google Quantum AI's system performed a calculation in 200 seconds that it said WOULD have taken the most powerful supercomputers 10,000 years to do. That announcement stirred some controversy, though, with a rival claiming that an alternative technique would have enabled a supercomputer to perform the same calculation in two and a half days.
There wasn't any quibbling about Google Quantum AI's next big breakthrough, though. In February 2023, it demonstrated a logical qubit (quantum bit) prototype that reduced errors by increasing the number of qubits. This was a major advance in quantum error correction, which is a key step toward building a useful large-scale quantum computer.
Google Quantum AI thinks it might be able to create a powerful quantum computer by the end of the decade. It shouldn't be limited by a lack of financial resources, with Alphabet expected to generate close to $400 billion in revenue this year.
The "AI" (artificial intelligence) in Google Quantum AI's name is important, too. Arguably, no company is better positioned to leverage quantum computing for training and deploying AI models than Alphabet.
2. IonQ
(IONQ 7.05%) is the largest of several up-and-coming quantum computing pioneers, with a market cap of around $11 billion. The company also believes it's the leader in commercializing the technology.
Is that just hype? Nope. IonQ is the only company with quantum hardware available on all three of the largest cloud platforms:Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud, andAzure. It has hundreds of partners and customers, including,, and. And the company's revenue has increased by a compound annual growth rate of 175% since 2021.
IonQ thinks its trapped-ion architecture offers several advantages over competing superconducting approaches. For example, trapped ions have the longest qubit lifetime and can run at room temperature rather than requiring refrigeration.
To be sure, IonQ is going head-to-head with rivals that have much deeper pockets. However, if the company can successfully execute its development strategy, it could have the most powerful quantum computers on the market by far within the next few years.
3. IBM
It might seem strange for a company that's been in business for 114 years to be a leader in a futuristic technology like quantum computing. However, that's the case with(IBM 0.94%). And this granddaddy of tech might have the most quantum swagger around.
IBM claims to have "the world's most powerful quantum computing stack." The company also says that it offers "the world's largest fleet of utility-scale quantum computers." But where its confidence manifests itself the most is in its road map.
The company and its partners are already testing quantum computers that they maintain are competitive with current classical computers. IBM predicts that by the end of 2026, it will help usher in the "era of quantum advantage" where quantum computers are clearly better, faster, and/or more cost-effective than classical computers.
Like Babe Ruth pointing to the flagpole at center field before hitting a home run, IBM says that it will deliver a quantum computer in 2029 with 100 million gates and 200 logical qubits. If the company delivers on its promise, it could be the undisputed leader in quantum computing. Its share price could be much higher, too.