Here’s Exactly How Much to Pour Into Invesco QQQ ETF to Hit $1 Million+ by Retirement
Forget picking stocks—just ride the tech wave.
The Invesco QQQ ETF tracks the Nasdaq-100, packing giants like Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon. No guesswork, no stock-picking stress—just pure exposure to innovation’s heavyweights.
How much to invest?
Crunch the numbers: consistent monthly buys compound over time. Start early, stay disciplined, and let market growth work its magic. Retirement dreams aren’t built on hope—they’re built on math.
Wall Street loves complexity—you don’t have to. Sometimes the simplest path to a million is betting on the future, not a fund manager’s Ferrari.
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Why the QQQ ETF is ideal for long-term investors
If you're investing for the long haul (e.g., at least 10-plus years), then you'll probably want to consider prioritizing growth stocks for your portfolio. That's because while growth stocks can be volatile in any given year, over a long time frame they generally do well and can outperform the, a leading index of how the overall market is doing.
The Invesco QQQ Trust can be ideal for this purpose. It doesn't track the S&P 500 but instead mirrors the, which is a collection of the top 100 nonfinancial stocks on the Nasdaq Stock Market. It is a more selective and exclusive club than the S&P 500.
In the past 10 years, the Invesco QQQ Trust has generated total returns (which include dividends) of 460%, versus 266% for the S&P 500. That means the Invesco Trust has averaged an annual return of nearly 19% over that stretch, while the S&P 500 has grown by close to 14% per year.
How much would you need to invest in the Invesco QQQ Trust to help ensure you're on track to retire with $1 million?
The market has been red hot in recent years, and the danger for investors is to assume that it will continue to be hot. Realistically, there may be more-tepid growth in upcoming years. Setting expectations too high may lead to disappointment later on.
A more conservative approach could be to assume that the Invesco fund slows down and perhaps falls in line with the S&P 500 average annual return of around 10%, or perhaps even lower than that. Stock returns are never guaranteed. With tariffs potentially affecting companies and the economy being far from ideal, businesses may experience a slowdown in the NEAR future.
However, assuming annul growth rates of between 8% and 11% -- which, again, are not guaranteed -- here is how much you would need to have invested today, in a fund such as the QQQ ETF, to be on track to retire with $1 million or more (assuming you retire at age 65).
| 55 | 10 | $463,193 | $422,411 | $385,543 | $352,184 |
| 50 | 15 | $315,242 | $274,538 | $239,392 | $209,004 |
| 45 | 20 | $214,548 | $178,431 | $148,644 | $124,034 |
| 40 | 25 | $146,018 | $115,968 | $92,296 | $73,608 |
| 35 | 30 | $99,377 | $75,371 | $57,309 | $43,683 |
| 30 | 35 | $67,635 | $48,986 | $35,584 | $25,924 |
Calculations by author.
What you can do if you're not on track
The above numbers can seem intimidating and it may not be likely for the vast majority of people to have such large sums of money available to invest right now. But the table can help serve as a guide. It also underscores the importance of investing on an ongoing basis, to add to your balance over time, for it to become as large as possible. Knowing whether you're on track can at least allow you to set realistic expectations and possibly adapt, by either trying to save and invest more money, or planning to retire a bit later, to allow for more growth.
In the end, a lot is going to depend on the growth rate you end up averaging over the long run. There's no guarantee what it might be, but by targeting growth stocks with the Invesco QQQ Trust and similar types of ETFs, you can make the most of the money you invest in the stock market.