Stock price for GOOG on 9/25/2025
Executive summary
A direct, verifiable closing price for Alphabet Inc. Class C (ticker GOOG) on September 25, 2025 cannot be produced from the provided reporting because none of the supplied sources include a line-item or table explicitly showing the 9/25/2025 closing price; the databases cited here are historical-data services that offer that capability (Yahoo, Nasdaq, MacroTrends, Investing.com, Google Finance) but the snippets supplied do not contain the specific date’s figure [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]. The correct next step is to pull the single-day historical quote from a primary historical-data page (Yahoo Finance, Nasdaq, Google Finance or Investing.com) or an official exchange record; the sources in this packet point to those services but do not include the exact 9/25/2025 value itself [1] [2] [5] [4].
1. The question being asked and what the available reporting actually contains
The user asked for a specific historical stock price — a discrete factual value that is normally recorded in daily historical-price tables maintained by exchanges and financial-data sites; the collection of sources provided are primarily links to those data services (Yahoo Finance, Nasdaq, MacroTrends, Investing.com, Google Finance and others), which routinely publish day-by-day closing prices and downloadable historical tables [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]. However, the excerpts supplied do not include a quoted closing price for the exact date of September 25, 2025, so the packet cannot be used to state a precise number with citation to these snippets alone [1] [2] [3].
2. Why a precise single-day figure matters and how vendors differ
A single-day closing price is an unambiguous datapoint if taken from a reliable historical table, but minor discrepancies can appear between vendors because of late trades, data vendor time zones, or whether a site shows the trade-at-close or an adjusted close that accounts for corporate actions; the sources here reflect major data vendors that provide downloadable daily records and note such differences in practice [4] [6] [7]. Users should therefore prefer primary exchange data (Nasdaq’s historical table) or a major aggregator like Yahoo Finance or Investing.com for a single-day historical close to avoid confusion [2] [1] [4].
3. What the provided sources do confirm about GOOG’s 2025 trading context
Although the precise 9/25/2025 number isn’t in these snippets, the packet shows that multiple mainstream historical-data services track GOOG’s daily prices and that Alphabet traded through a wide range in late 2025 — with November 2025 marking some of the year’s highs according to MacroTrends and other pages citing a late-November 2025 peak in the low-$320s [3] [8] [9]. Those same services are the appropriate places to extract the exact September 25, 2025 closing price because they allow date-range queries and downloads for daily open/high/low/close/volume [1] [2] [4].
4. Recommended, verifiable next steps to get the exact figure
To obtain a fully citable closing price for GOOG on 2025-09-25, query the historical-price table on any primary vendor listed here — for example Yahoo Finance’s GOOG history page, Nasdaq’s historical data page, Google Finance, or Investing.com, each of which provides day-by-day closing prices and a download option [1] [2] [5] [4]. If rounding or class-share differences matter, note whether the query is for Class C (GOOG) or Class A (GOOGL), because both have parallel but separate series and the packet includes references to both tickers [5] [4]. Finally, cross-check two sources to confirm there is no vendor-specific adjustment affecting the reported close [2] [1].
5. Transparency about the limits of the reporting provided
This analysis does not invent or guess a numeric close for 2025-09-25 because the provided snippets do not contain that date’s closing price; doing so would violate the record-based nature of the question and the instruction to cite each factual assertion to the supplied reporting [1] [2] [3]. The sources named here are the correct tools to retrieve that single-day historical price; the absence of the explicit value in the provided extracts is the only reason a numeric answer is not given here [1] [2] [3].