The single most important metric for dividend investors. Learn to calculate it correctly in under 5 minutes.
Dividend Yield = (Annual Dividend Γ· Stock Price) Γ 100
Annual Dividend
Total paid per share per year
Γ·
Divided by
Stock Price
Current price per share
Example: Coca-Cola
This means for every $100 invested, you earn $3.13 per year in dividends.
Most stocks pay quarterly (4 times per year). To get the annual dividend:
Method 1: Multiply Quarterly
Latest quarterly dividend Γ 4
Example: $0.50/quarter Γ 4 = $2.00/year
Method 2: Use "Indicated Dividend"
Most financial sites show this directly
Look for "Annual Div" or "Indicated Dividend"
Watch out for special dividends
Some companies pay one-time "special" dividends. Don't include these when calculating yieldβonly use regular, recurring dividends.
Use the current market price, not yesterday's or last week's. Yield changes as price changes.
Where to find current price:
Take annual dividend, divide by stock price, multiply by 100 to get percentage:
Example 1: Johnson & Johnson
Annual dividend: $4.76 | Price: $160
($4.76 Γ· $160) Γ 100 = 2.98%
Example 2: AT&T
Annual dividend: $1.11 | Price: $18
($1.11 Γ· $18) Γ 100 = 6.17%
Example 3: Visa
Annual dividend: $2.08 | Price: $280
($2.08 Γ· $280) Γ 100 = 0.74%
Pre-built Excel template that calculates yield automatically for your entire portfolio
The dividend payment is fixed, but the stock price fluctuates. This creates an inverse relationship:
Price Goes DOWN β Yield Goes UP
Example: XYZ Stock
Dividend: $2/year (unchanged)
Price drops: $50 β $40
Yield changes: 4.0% β 5.0%
Price Goes UP β Yield Goes DOWN
Example: ABC Stock
Dividend: $2/year (unchanged)
Price rises: $50 β $60
Yield changes: 4.0% β 3.3%
Key insight: A 10% yield isn't always "better" than 3%. Sometimes high yields signal that investors expect a dividend cut (which is why the price fell).
The problem: Company cuts dividend from $4 to $2, but Yahoo Finance still shows old $4 number for a few weeks. You calculate using old data.
β Solution: Always check the most recent dividend announcement on company investor relations page before calculating.
The problem: Company pays regular $2/year + one-time $5 special dividend. You calculate yield using $7 total, making it look sustainable.
β Solution: Only use regular, recurring dividends. Special dividends are bonuses, not reliable income.
The problem: Stock pays $0.10/month. You divide by price and get 0.5% yield, forgetting there are 12 monthly payments.
β Solution: Monthly dividend Γ 12 = annual. ($0.10 Γ 12 = $1.20 annual)
The problem: You bought at $50, stock is now $60. You calculate yield using $50 (your cost basis) instead of $60 (current market price).
β Solution: Always use current market price for "yield." Your personal "yield on cost" is different (and uses your purchase price).
0% - 1.5%
Companies reinvesting heavily in growth. Examples: Visa, Mastercard, Costco, Microsoft. Low yield today but usually growing 10-20% annually.
2% - 4%
Balanced approach. Solid current income + room for dividend growth. Examples: JNJ, PG, KO, PEP. Most dividend aristocrats fall here. Safest zone for beginners.
4% - 6%
Higher income focus. Examples: Verizon, AT&T, quality REITs, some utilities. Dividend growth may be slower (5-8% annually). Still generally safe.
6% - 10%
High income but elevated risk. Examples: BDCs, mREITs, struggling companies. Dividend cuts are common during recessions. Research carefully.
10%+
Extreme yields usually signal dividend cut coming. Stock price has crashed because investors expect bad news. Can be opportunities for experienced investors, but beginners should avoid.
Annual Dividend Γ· Current Market Price
What the stock yields right now if you buy it today. Changes daily as price moves. Used to compare investment opportunities.
Annual Dividend Γ· Your Purchase Price
What the stock yields based on what you paid. Stays constant as your cost doesn't change. Used to track personal returns over time.
Example: The Magic of Yield on Cost
2010: You buy Coca-Cola at $30/share, dividend is $0.88/year
β Yield at purchase: 2.93%
2026: Stock is now $62, dividend has grown to $1.94/year
β Current yield: 3.13%
β Your yield on cost: 6.47%!
You're earning 6.47% on your original investment even though the stock "only" yields 3.13% today. This is the power of dividend growth over long time periods.
Calculate yield for any stock instantly + see income projections
Dividend yield is always calculated before taxes. It's the gross yield. Your after-tax yield depends on your tax bracket and account type (Roth IRA dividends are tax-free, for example).
Most people use trailing (last 12 months of actual payments) because it's factual. "Forward" yield uses projected future payments, which may not happen if the company cuts dividends. Trailing is more conservative and accurate.
No. Yield is purely dividend Γ· price, regardless of whether you reinvest. However, DRIP compounds your returns over time by buying more shares, which increases your total income in future years.
Timing differences. One site uses this morning's price, another uses yesterday's close. Or they use different dividend figures (trailing vs indicated). The differences are usually small (0.1-0.2%). Use your broker's numbers as they're most up-to-date.