Large Cap Stocks Under $100
100 stocks · Updated Mar 25, 2026
This screen finds large-cap companies (market cap above $5B) trading below $100 per share — a sweet spot for investors who want institutional-quality businesses at accessible price points. High share prices at major companies like Amazon or Google are often the result of not splitting shares, creating a perception of inaccessibility despite fractional share availability at most brokers. This list focuses on quality large caps that happen to have lower absolute share prices.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Does a lower share price mean a company is cheaper?
No — share price without context of market cap and valuation multiples is meaningless. A $50 stock can be far more expensive than a $5,000 stock. Always evaluate P/E, P/S, and P/B ratios rather than nominal share price.
Why do some large companies have low share prices?
Companies that have done stock splits to maintain accessibility (Apple, Tesla, Amazon) trade at lower prices per share. Some companies prefer low absolute prices to maximize retail investor participation and liquidity.
Are there benefits to stocks under $100 for retail investors?
Lower-priced shares allow easier portfolio construction with whole-share positions. However, fractional shares are now available at most brokers, making price-per-share a less relevant practical consideration than it once was.
What is a stock split and how does it affect this list?
A stock split increases the number of shares while proportionally decreasing the price (e.g., 2-for-1 split doubles shares and halves price). Splits move stocks into lower price ranges without changing their market cap or fundamental value.