The most searched is one of Warren Buffett’s favorites.
What are the most searched stocks across the United States?
Many might guess that big names like Apple or Microsoft are among the most Googled stocks. But neither of these “Magnificent Seven” stocks made the list, according to research from insurance and bond company Surety First.
Image source: Getty Images.
Using Google Trends, Surety First looked at the most-searched stocks over a 12-month period in each of the 50 states to identify the most popular in each state. The top stocks in the most states — six each — were Coca-Cola (KO 0.33%) and GameStop (GME +1.89%). It shows how different regional trends are, given how different these two stocks are.
Coca-Cola and GameStop
Coca-Cola was most searched in Alabama, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Oklahoma, and South Carolina, according to Surety First.
Coke is one of the longest-held and largest holdings in Berkshire Hathaway, added by former CEO Warren Buffett in 1988 after the Black Monday crash. It has been a steady performer over the decades, as evidenced by this Dividend King’s 63-year streak of raising its dividend. To qualify for that title, you need to increase dividends annually for at least 50 years in a row.

Today’s Change
(-0.33%) $-0.27
Current Price
$80.45
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$347B
Day’s Range
$79.56 – $80.69
52wk Range
$65.35 – $81.09
Volume
642K
Avg Vol
18M
Gross Margin
61.75%
Dividend Yield
2.53%
Coca-Cola stock is up about 14% over the past 12 months and 13% year to date, so investors in these states likely sought the stability of this stock amid market uncertainty.
GameStop was also the most searched in six states, including Colorado, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Vermont, and Wisconsin.
The meme stock icon is about as different from Coca-Cola as you can get. Its mercurial, meme-fueled rise in 2021 captured investors’ attention, but it crashed in 2022 and has largely stayed within a range of $10 to $35 per share since then, currently at $23 per share.

Today’s Change
(1.89%) $0.45
Current Price
$24.22
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$11B
Day’s Range
$23.70 – $24.31
52wk Range
$19.93 – $35.81
Volume
4.6M
Avg Vol
7.7M
Gross Margin
30.79%
GameStop has experienced declining revenue, although massive cost cuts have improved its earnings. Investors in these states may be curious about a potential turnaround or another meme-stock rally, but they should proceed with caution.
Walt Disney and SoFi
Walt Disney (DIS 0.90%) led in four states: Connecticut, Kentucky, Louisiana, and West Virginia. Disney has been in the news quite a bit over the past year and not all of it good. It got a lot of attention for launching its sports package and its battle with YouTube TV, and longtime CEO Bob Iger recently announced that he is retiring at the end of 2026. Disney stock is pretty cheap right now, and it could be poised to break out after a challenging year.

Today’s Change
(-0.90%) $-0.95
Current Price
$105.10
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$188B
Day’s Range
$104.53 – $106.54
52wk Range
$80.10 – $124.69
Volume
370K
Avg Vol
11M
Gross Margin
31.61%
Dividend Yield
1.18%
The only other stock most searched in more than two states is SoFi Technologies (SOFI +3.32%). It was the most Googled stock in Montana, Texas, and Utah. The popular fintech was one of the top stocks of 2025, returning 70%, but it has dropped some 30% year-to-date on high valuation and the larger tech sell-off.
The most popular stocks in each of the two states include Visa, Tesla, Shopify, Palantir, Nokia, and AMC Entertainment.
Nvidia was most searched in California, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing in Arizona, Amazon in Washington, Bank of America in North Carolina, Google parent Alphabet in Iowa, Walmart in Arkansas, AMD in Colorado, Intel in Oregon, and JPMorgan Chase in Delaware. And in New York, it was SPDR, the exchange-traded fund (ETF) provider.
JPMorgan Chase is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Bank of America is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Dave Kovaleski has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Berkshire Hathaway, Intel, JPMorgan Chase, Microsoft, Nvidia, Palantir Technologies, Shopify, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Tesla, Visa, Walmart, and Walt Disney. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
