Calculadora de Rendimiento por Dividendos Gratis

Calcula el rendimiento por dividendos de una acción. Compara el dividendo anual con el precio de la acción para evaluar ingresos pasivos.

USD
USD

Dividend Yield

3.50%

Annual Dividend Income$350.00
Monthly Dividend Income$29.17

Dividend Yield vs Annual Dividend per Share

Fórmula

What Dividend Yield Tells You

Dividend yield is the annual dividend payment divided by the stock price, expressed as a percentage. If a stock costs $50 and pays $2 per year in dividends, the yield is 4%. It tells you what return you're getting from dividends alone, ignoring any stock price changes.

The Formula

Dividend Yield = (Annual Dividend Per Share / Current Stock Price) x 100

Most companies pay dividends quarterly. To get the annual dividend, multiply the quarterly payment by 4. Some companies pay monthly or semi-annually, so check the payment schedule.

When to Use This

Comparing income potential across different dividend stocks. A $100 stock paying $3/year (3% yield) vs. a $25 stock paying $1/year (4% yield). The cheaper stock actually generates more income per dollar invested. This matters for retirement portfolios and income-focused investing.

What Yield Doesn't Tell You

A high yield isn't always good. If a stock drops from $50 to $25 while maintaining its $2 dividend, the yield doubles from 4% to 8%. That looks attractive on paper, but the stock fell 50%. This is called a "yield trap." The company might cut the dividend next quarter.

Yield also doesn't account for dividend growth. A stock yielding 2% that increases its dividend 10% per year will generate more income over a decade than a stock yielding 5% with no growth.

Typical Yield Ranges

  • S&P 500 average: about 1.3-1.5% (as of 2025-2026)
  • Utilities and REITs: typically 3-6%
  • High-yield stocks: 5-10% (higher risk of cuts)
  • Growth stocks (tech): often 0%, reinvesting profits instead
  • Common Mistakes

  • Chasing the highest yield without checking the payout ratio. If a company pays out more than 80-90% of earnings as dividends, there's little margin for error. A bad quarter could force a cut.
  • Using trailing yield when the dividend has just been cut. The trailing 12-month yield includes payments that won't repeat. Check the forward yield (based on announced future payments) instead.
  • Ignoring tax treatment. Qualified dividends are taxed at capital gains rates (0-20%). Non-qualified dividends are taxed as ordinary income (up to 37%). REITs and MLPs often pay non-qualified dividends.
  • Ejemplo Resuelto

    A stock paying $3.50 annual dividend at $100 per share, owning 100 shares.

    1. 01Yield = $3.50 / $100 × 100 = 3.5%
    2. 02Annual income = $3.50 × 100 = $350
    3. 03Monthly income = $350 / 12 = $29.17

    Preguntas Frecuentes

    What is a good dividend yield?

    The S&P 500 average yield is about 1.5-2%. Yields of 3-5% are considered good. Yields above 7% may indicate risk.

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