Free stock valuation tool with DCF and PE ratio analysis, sensitivity heatmap, and one-click share card
Best coverage for US-listed stocks
Reference: Stable 10–15× · Growth 15–25× · High-growth 25–40×
Aggressive 8% · S&P 500 avg 10% · Conservative 12%
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice.
Best coverage for US-listed stocks
Reference: Stable 10–15× · Growth 15–25× · High-growth 25–40×
Aggressive 8% · S&P 500 avg 10% · Conservative 12%
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice.
Best coverage for US-listed stocks
Reference: Stable 12–18× · Growth 20–35× · High-growth 35–60×
Aggressive 8% · S&P 500 avg 10% · Conservative 12%
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice.
Best coverage for US-listed stocks
Reference: Stable 12–18× · Growth 20–35× · High-growth 35–60×
Aggressive 8% · S&P 500 avg 10% · Conservative 12%
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice.
Type any US stock symbol — we auto-fill the latest free cash flow and price data.
Set growth rates, discount rate, and terminal value method to match your investment thesis.
Instantly see per-share intrinsic value, margin of safety, and implied annual return.
Our heatmap shows how valuation shifts across a matrix of growth and discount rates.
See stock valuation examples for popular US stocks. Click any card to view the full analysis.
The stock appears significantly undervalued. This is the zone value investors like Warren Buffett look for — a wide margin of safety reduces downside risk.
What is Margin of Safety? →The stock is trading near its intrinsic value. Consider the quality of your assumptions and whether the company has a durable competitive moat.
What is Intrinsic Value? →The current price exceeds our valuation estimate by a wide margin. This doesn't mean the stock will fall — but the expected return is lower at this price.
What is Free Cash Flow? →Common questions about our stock valuation calculator.