Free Dividend Yield Calculator

Calculate the dividend yield of a stock based on its annual dividend and current price.

USD
USD

Dividend Yield

3.50%

Annual Dividend Income$350.00
Monthly Dividend Income$29.17

Dividend Yield vs Annual Dividend per Share

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.
  • Example Calculation

    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

    Frequently Asked Questions

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