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Dividend Calculator

Estimate how much dividend income you can earn from stocks, ETFs, and funds. Including reinvestment (DRIP), taxes, and long-term growth.

Calculator

Share price
$
x
Number of shares
=
Investment amount
$
Holding period (years)
i
Expected dividend yield
%
i
Distribution frequency
Quarterly
i
Annual contribution
$
i
Dividend tax rate
%
i
Expected annual dividend increase %
%
i
Expected annual share price increase %
%
i
DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Plan)
Without DRIP
i
After 10 Years
End Balance
Total Return
Avg. Annual Return
Annual Dividend Income
Total Dividend Payment
Yield on Cost
$10000.000.00%0.00%$500.00$5000.005.00%
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Dividends By Year

Year
Shares Owned
Annual Dividend Per Share
Annual Dividend
Compound Frequency
Annual Contribution
Year-End Shares Owned
Year-End Stock Price
New Balance
1100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00
2100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00
3100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00
4100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00
5100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00
6100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00
7100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00
8100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00
9100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00
10100.00$5.00$2000.004 times/year$0.00100.00$100.00$10000.00

Today's Dividends (Jul 15, 2026)

Company
Amount
Yield
Payment Date
AbbVie
$1.73+2.79%
Abbott Laboratories
$0.63+2.79%
Freeport-McMoRan
$0.15+0.97%
EMCOR Group
$0.40+0.19%
Strategy Inc 9% Perp Stretch PFD Registered Shs Series A
$0.50+11.84%
Fomento Economico Mexicano
$1.83+5.81%
Mid-America Apartment
$1.53+4.57%
American Financial Group
$0.88+4.97%
Shanghai Pharmaceuticals Holding Co
$0.05+4.70%
Empire Co Cl A NV
$0.17+1.81%

How the Dividend Calculator Works

Investors earn returns from stocks in two ways:
  • Share price growth
  • Dividend income (regular payouts from company profits)
This calculator helps you estimate both - especially future dividend income over time.
To use it:
  1. Enter a stock or ETF
  2. Choose your investment amount or number of shares
  3. Select your holding period
The calculator automatically fills:
  • Share price
  • Dividend yield
  • Payout frequency
  • DRIP vs cash payouts
You can also adjust:
  • Annual contributions
  • Dividend growth rate
  • Share price growth
  • Tax rate
  • Reinvestment settings
The result: You'll see your total return avg. annual return, annual income, yield on cost, and full yearly breakdown.

Example – How Much Dividend Income Can You Earn?

Let's say you invest:
  • $10,000
  • 3% dividend yield
  • 5% annual dividend growth
  • 20-year horizon
With DRIP:
  • Your income compounds each year
  • Total value can grow significantly faster
Without DRIP:
  • You receive steady cash income
  • Lower total long-term growth
This is exactly what the calculator helps you visualize.

Where the Data Comes From

All dividend data is powered by TipRanks:
  • Real-time market data
  • Analyst estimates
  • Historical dividend payouts
This allows the calculator to reflect current yields and forward expectations, not just static assumptions.

Which Dividend Yield Is Used?

By default, the calculator uses:
Trailing 12-month dividend yield
But you can override this with:
  • Forward yield
  • Custom assumptions

DRIP vs Cash – What's the Difference?

DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Plan)

  • Dividends are reinvested into more shares
  • Creates compounding growth
  • Best for long-term investors

Cash Payout

  • Dividends are paid directly to you
  • Useful for income-focused investors
Over long periods, DRIP typically produces higher total returns due to compounding.

How Taxes Impact Your Returns

Dividends are taxed differently depending on:

Qualified dividends

  • Lower tax rate (0–20%)

Ordinary dividends

  • Higher income tax rate
You can adjust tax rates in the calculator to see how they affect:
  • Net income
  • Total return

How TipRanks Estimates Dividend Growth

Unlike basic calculators, TipRanks uses:
  • Analyst consensus ratings
  • Historical dividend data
  • Payout ratios
  • Expected price upside
This allows for more realistic projections.

Why Dividend Yield Alone Can Be Misleading

A high dividend yield doesn't always mean a good investment.
It can signal:
  • Falling stock price
  • Unsustainable payouts
  • Weak fundamentals
This is known as a dividend yield trap
Always consider:
  • Payout ratio
  • Earnings stability
  • Cash flow

FAQ

What are dividends?
Dividends are payments that publicly traded companies make to their shareholders. Companies that offer dividends share their profits with their investors.
Companies that pay dividends usually do so quarterly. Dividends can also be paid over other time frames, for example monthly or yearly. Dividends provide investors with a regular source of income. They can also offer protection against market volatility.
The company’s board of directors determines the dividend amount per share. If a company pays out a $5 dividend every quarter and you own 20 shares, you will receive $100 in dividends quarterly.
Dividend payments are usually paid in cash. Some companies enable investors to automatically reinvest their dividends. This is called DRIP (dividend reinvestment plan).
    Why is dividend yield important?
    Dividend yields are important. They show annual dividend payout relative to share price. Dividend yield offers a way to understand returns as a proportion of your investment. As companies pay dividends on a per-share basis, this makes it easier to compare payouts.
      What is the dividend yield formula?
      Dividend yield is calculated as a percentage. It compares the ratio of a company’s annual dividend to its share price, using this formula:
      Dividend yield = annual dividend/ stock price * 100
        What is DRIP?
        Dividend reinvestment plans, also known as DRIP, are when companies automatically reinvest investors’ dividends to buy more shares. Most companies do not have DRIP.
        The advantage of reinvesting dividends is that they compound.
          How do you calculate dividend payments that are reinvested?
          The formula for calculating dividend reinvestment is:
          FV = P * (1+ r/m)^mt
          Where
          FV = future value of the investment
          P = the money invested or initial balance
          r = the dividend yield (in decimals)
          m = the number of times the dividend is compounded per year (compounding frequency)
          t = the numbers of years the money is invested for

          This may seem complicated, however that’s exactly why we created this stock dividend calculator.
          First calculate dividend yield using the formula

          Dividend yield = annual dividend/ stock price * 100
          If a share price is $50 and the annual dividend is $3.50, dividend yield is calculated using the formula:
          Therefore:
          Dividend yield = $3.50 / $50 = 0.07
          Now, entering the variables into the dividend reinvestment formula:
          Final balance = $1,000 * (1 + 0.07/1) = $1,144.90
          This means investing $1,000 into a company with 7% dividend yield would result in a $144.90 profit after two years and a total of $1,144.90, if dividends are reinvested over one year.
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