Dividend Calculator

Estimate how much passive income your dividend portfolio could generate. Look up any stock by ticker, model different yields, tax rates, and growth scenarios to see the power of reinvestment over time.

By MerryDiv Team|Last updated: April 2026

Your Inputs

$
%
$
%
%
%
years

Your Estimated Income

Monthly Dividend Income
$79.08
In year 10
Annual Dividend Income
$948.99
In year 10
Total Dividends Earned
$6,463.11
Over 10 years
Portfolio Value
$28,463.11
With reinvested dividends

Rate this calculator

These estimates do not account for taxes, fees, inflation, market conditions, or dividend cuts. Actual results will vary.

From Projections to Real Numbers

This calculator shows what's possible. MerryDiv shows what's actually happening — connect your accounts and see every dividend payment as it lands.

Start Tracking Dividends — Free
No credit card requiredTracks every payment automaticallyMonthly income reports
With DRIP
Portfolio Value$28,463.11
Annual Income (Yr 10)$948.99
Total Dividends$6,463.11
Without DRIP
Portfolio Value$22,000.00
Annual Income (Yr 10)$743.75
Total Dividends$5,547.50
DRIP adds $6,463.11 to your portfolio over 10 years
Portfolio Value
$28,463.11
Dividends
$6,463.1123%
Contributions
$12,000.0042%
Principal
$10,000.0035%

Dividend Income Growth

Annual dividend income per year — DRIP vs no DRIP

Yr 1Yr 2Yr 3Yr 4Yr 5Yr 6Yr 7Yr 8Yr 9Yr 10$0$100$200$300$400$500$600$700$800$900

Year-by-Year Growth

Year-by-year dividend income and portfolio growth projections
YearPortfolio ValueAnnual DividendTotal Dividends
1$11,570.46$370.46$370.46
2$13,196.62$426.15$796.62
3$14,880.44$483.82$1,280.44
4$16,623.97$543.53$1,823.97
5$18,429.33$605.36$2,429.33
6$20,298.72$669.38$3,098.72
7$22,234.39$735.68$3,834.39
8$24,238.71$804.32$4,638.71
9$26,314.11$875.40$5,514.11
10$28,463.11$948.99$6,463.11

Popular Dividend Stocks to Try in the Calculator

Click any stock to open its dedicated calculator with real yield, growth rate, and dividend history. Browse all dividend stocks →

How It Works

How This Dividend Income Calculator Works

The Basic Formula

Annual Dividend = Current Portfolio Value × Dividend Yield

A $10,000 portfolio at a 3.5% dividend yield generates $350 per year, or about $29 per month. As your portfolio grows through reinvestment, contributions, or dividend growth, so does your dividend income.

How the Calculator Compounds Your Dividend Income

When you reinvest dividends and make regular contributions, your portfolio grows through compound growth. Each dividend payment buys more shares, and those shares generate their own dividends over time. To model this accurately, the calculator uses the standard future value formula:

FV = P × (1 + r)n + C × [((1 + r)n − 1) / r]
P = your initial investment
r = dividend yield per compounding period
n = total number of compounding periods
C = contribution per period

Unlike a basic interest calculator, this dividend reinvestment calculator also supports variable dividend growth rates, multiple compounding frequencies (monthly, quarterly, annual), share price appreciation, tax impact modeling, and optional DRIP — giving you a more realistic projection of long-term passive income and portfolio growth.

From Estimates to Real Tracking

This dividend income calculator provides long-term portfolio projections based on yield, contributions, dividend growth, and reinvestment. Once you start investing, MerryDiv's dividend tracker connects to your brokerage accounts and tracks your actual dividend payments automatically — no more guessing or spreadsheets. You can also use our portfolio tracker to monitor your holdings and sector diversification alongside your dividend income.

Step by Step

How to Use This Dividend Calculator

1

Look Up a Stock (Optional)

Start by searching for a stock or ETF by ticker symbol or name. The calculator will auto-fill the current dividend yield and payment frequency. You can also skip this step and enter values manually.

2

Enter Your Initial Investment

Start with the amount you plan to invest or have already invested. This is your principal — the foundation of your dividend income. Even a modest amount like $5,000 or $10,000 can generate meaningful passive income over time.

3

Set Your Dividend Yield

Enter the average annual dividend yield of your portfolio or target stock. The S&P 500 average is around 1.3%, while established dividend stocks typically yield 2-4%. You can find a stock's dividend yield on any financial data site or your brokerage platform.

4

Add Contributions and Growth Rates

Set your annual contributions, expected dividend growth rate, and share price appreciation. Consistent contributions — even $100/month ($1,200/year) — can dramatically accelerate your portfolio growth. Dividend Aristocrats have raised dividends for 25+ consecutive years, often at 3-7% per year.

5

Model Tax Impact

Enter your expected dividend tax rate to see after-tax income. Qualified dividends are taxed at 0-20% depending on your bracket. If your investments are in a Roth IRA or 401(k), set the tax rate to 0%.

6

Choose Frequency and DRIP

Select how often dividends are paid — most U.S. stocks pay quarterly. Then decide whether to reinvest dividends (DRIP). Reinvesting means your dividends buy more shares, which generate their own dividends — this is the power of compounding.

7

Compare DRIP vs No DRIP

Scroll down to the DRIP comparison section to see both scenarios side by side. Over 20-30 years, the difference between reinvesting and taking cash dividends can be hundreds of thousands of dollars. The comparison chart makes this easy to visualize.

8

Review Your Results

The calculator shows your estimated monthly and annual dividend income, total dividends earned, and final portfolio value. Scroll down to see the portfolio breakdown chart, year-by-year growth visualization, and detailed table with exact figures for each year.

Tax Guide

Tax Impact on Dividend Income

Taxes are one of the biggest drags on dividend income. Understanding how dividends are taxed helps you keep more of what you earn and choose the right accounts for your investments.

Qualified vs. Ordinary Dividends

The IRS treats dividends differently depending on their classification. Qualified dividends are paid by most U.S. corporations on shares you have held for at least 60 days during the 121-day period that begins 60 days before the ex-dividend date. These are taxed at the lower long-term capital gains rates.

Non-qualified (ordinary) dividends include most REIT distributions, money market dividends, and dividends on shares held for less than the required period. These are taxed at your ordinary income tax rate, which can be as high as 37%.

2024 qualified dividend tax rate thresholds by filing status
Filing Status0% Rate15% Rate20% Rate
SingleUp to $47,025$47,026 - $518,900Over $518,900
Married Filing JointlyUp to $94,050$94,051 - $583,750Over $583,750

Note: High earners may also owe the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) on top of these rates. Income thresholds are approximate and subject to annual adjustments.

Tax-Advantaged Accounts

The easiest way to eliminate the tax drag on dividends is to hold dividend-paying stocks in tax-advantaged accounts:

  • Roth IRA / Roth 401(k): Dividends grow and are withdrawn completely tax-free in retirement. Best for high-growth dividend stocks you plan to hold for decades.
  • Traditional IRA / 401(k): Dividends are not taxed when received, but withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income. Good for reducing your current tax bill.
  • HSA (Health Savings Account): Triple tax benefit — contributions are deductible, growth is tax-free, and qualified withdrawals are tax-free.

If you hold dividend stocks in a taxable brokerage account, use the Tax Rate input in the calculator above to see how taxes affect your long-term income. For REIT-heavy portfolios, see our REIT dividend tax guide for specific strategies.

Strategy

High-Yield vs. Dividend Growth: Two Strategies Compared

Dividend investors typically follow one of two paths. Each has trade-offs depending on your timeline and income goals.

The High-Yield Approach (4-8%+ yield)

High-yield investors prioritize current income. REITs like Realty Income (O) and stocks like Altria (MO) yield 5-6%, generating significant cash flow immediately. A $100,000 portfolio at 5% yield produces $5,000 per year from day one. The trade-off: high-yield stocks often have slower dividend growth (1-3% annually) and may carry more risk of dividend cuts.

Watch for yield traps. An unusually high yield (8%+) can signal financial distress — the stock price may have dropped because the market expects a dividend cut. Always check the payout ratio before investing. A payout ratio above 80-90% for non-REITs is a warning sign.

The Dividend Growth Approach (2-3% yield, 7-15% growth)

Dividend growth investors accept a lower starting yield in exchange for faster dividend increases. Stocks like Coca-Cola (KO) and PepsiCo (PEP) have delivered strong long-term dividend growth. ETFs like SCHD and DVY offer diversified exposure. A 2.5% starting yield growing at 10% per year doubles every 7 years — by year 15, your yield on cost exceeds most high-yield stocks.

This approach works best for investors with a 10+ year horizon who can be patient while the compounding engine builds momentum.

Head-to-Head: $100,000 Invested Over 20 Years (DRIP On)

Comparison of high-yield vs. dividend growth strategies over 20 years
High-Yield (5%, 2% growth)Div Growth (2.5%, 10% growth)
Year 1 Income$5,000$2,500
Year 10 Income$10,525.52$8,957.41
Year 20 Income$24,992.63$66,688.52
Total Dividends$233,882.86$311,937.47

The high-yield approach wins on early income, but the dividend growth approach often catches up and surpasses it after 10-15 years. Many investors blend both strategies. Try our dividend growth calculator to model DRIP scenarios in more detail.

Examples

Real-World Dividend Growth Examples

Here are three scenarios built around real dividend-paying stocks, showing how dividends compound over different timelines and strategies.

Coca-Cola (KO): The Steady Saver Over 30 Years

$10,000 initial / $200 per month / 3% yield / 5% dividend growth / DRIP on

Portfolio Value
$349,959.92
Annual Income
$45,257.09
Total Dividends
$267,959.92

Coca-Cola is a Dividend King with 60+ consecutive years of dividend increases. Starting small with consistent contributions and a stock like KO turns $82,000 in total contributions into a substantial portfolio. Try it with KO's current yield →

SCHD ETF: Diversified Dividend Growth

$50,000 initial / $1,000 per month / 3.5% yield / 7% dividend growth / DRIP on

Portfolio Value
$816,454.31
Annual Income
$108,355.33
Total Dividends
$526,454.31

The Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD) holds 100+ dividend growth stocks and has delivered roughly 12% annualized dividend growth over the past decade. A diversified ETF removes single-stock risk while still providing strong growth. Model it with SCHD's current yield →

Realty Income (O): Monthly Dividends in Retirement

$500,000 initial / $0 contributions / 5% yield / 3% dividend growth / DRIP off

Portfolio Value
$500,000.00
Annual Income
$32,619.33
Total Dividends
$286,596.98

Realty Income pays dividends monthly and has increased its dividend for 100+ consecutive quarters. With $500K invested and no reinvestment, the growing dividend still increases annual income year over year, keeping pace with inflation. Try it with O's current yield →

Want to model your own scenario? Try the calculator above

Learn

Inflation, Dividend Aristocrats & Dividend Kings

Inflation quietly erodes your purchasing power every year. Dividend growth is one of the most reliable hedges against it.

Why Dividend Growth Beats Inflation

U.S. inflation has averaged about 3% per year over the past century. If your dividend income does not grow at least that fast, your purchasing power shrinks over time. A $1,000 monthly dividend that stays flat is worth only about $740 in today's dollars after 10 years of 3% inflation.

This is why dividend growth rate matters just as much as starting yield. A portfolio growing its dividends at 5-7% per year not only keeps pace with inflation but actually increases your real purchasing power. Use the Dividend Growth Rate input in the calculator to see how different growth rates affect your long-term income.

Where do you find stocks with that kind of track record? Dividend Aristocrats (25+ years of consecutive increases) and Dividend Kings (50+ years) are the gold standard. These companies have maintained and grown their dividends through recessions, market crashes, and industry disruptions — giving you confidence that the growth projections from this calculator have a realistic foundation.

Dividend Reinvestment Calculator (DRIP)

DRIP stands for Dividend Reinvestment Plan, where dividend payments are automatically used to purchase additional shares instead of being paid out as cash. This calculator models DRIP by default, showing how reinvested dividends compound your portfolio value over time. The side-by-side comparison above makes it easy to see the exact dollar difference between reinvesting and taking cash. Over 20+ years, DRIP can add tens of thousands of dollars to your portfolio from the same initial investment.

To model DRIP for a specific stock, use the ticker lookup above to auto-fill the yield and payment frequency, then compare both scenarios in the chart.

Dividend Growth Calculator

The Dividend Growth Rate input models companies that raise their dividends every year. This is the most important lever for long-term income investors: a stock yielding 2.5% today with 10% annual dividend growth will generate more income than a 5% yield with no growth after roughly 8 years. Set the growth rate above to see how annual increases compound your income.

For a deeper dive into growth-focused modeling with a target monthly income goal, try the dedicated dividend growth calculator.

Dividend Income Calculator

How much dividend income can your portfolio generate? Enter your investment amount and dividend yield above to see annual and monthly income projections. The calculator factors in dividend growth, DRIP reinvestment, and annual contributions to show how your income stream builds over time. At a 3.5% yield, a $100,000 portfolio generates $3,500 per year; with 7% dividend growth and DRIP, that same portfolio could produce over $10,000 per year within a decade.

If you have a specific monthly income target in mind, use the dedicated dividend income calculator to reverse-engineer exactly how much you need invested at different yields.

Monthly Dividend Calculator

Set the payment frequency to "Monthly" to see your projected income broken down by month. Stocks like Realty Income (O), STAG Industrial, and many bond ETFs pay monthly dividends, making them popular for investors building a predictable cash flow stream. Most large-cap dividend stocks pay quarterly, but you can stagger holdings across different payment months to create monthly income from quarterly payers.

Use the dividend calendar to learn how payment schedules work and how to build a portfolio that pays every month.

Case Studies

Real Stock Dividend Reinvestment Examples

These case studies use real dividend histories to show how reinvestment compounds wealth over decades.

Reinvesting Coca-Cola (KO) Dividends Since 1990

Coca-Cola has raised its dividend for over 60 consecutive years, making it one of the longest-running Dividend Kings in the market. An investor who purchased $10,000 of KO in 1990 and reinvested every dividend would have seen their position grow not just from price appreciation, but from the compounding effect of buying additional shares at each payment. KO's dividend has grown at roughly 7% annually over that period, meaning the dividend income itself doubled approximately every 10 years.

Model KO's current yield in the calculator →

Procter & Gamble (PG): 68 Years of Consecutive Increases

Procter & Gamble is another Dividend King that has paid dividends without interruption since 1891 and raised them every year for 68 consecutive years. PG's consumer staples business generates steady cash flow through recessions, making it a cornerstone of many dividend portfolios. The combination of a moderate yield (typically 2-3%) and consistent 5-6% dividend growth means PG investors see meaningful income growth while taking on relatively low risk.

Model PG's current yield in the calculator →

Johnson & Johnson (JNJ): Dividend Growth Through Every Market Cycle

JNJ has increased its dividend for 62 consecutive years, maintaining payouts through the dot-com crash, the 2008 financial crisis, and the COVID-19 pandemic. This consistency is why dividend growth investors use JNJ as a benchmark: if a company can raise its dividend through a global pandemic, the growth projections in a dividend calculator carry real credibility. JNJ's 5-year dividend growth rate has averaged about 5-6%.

Model JNJ's current yield in the calculator →

How Much Do You Need to Invest to Earn $1,000 per Month in Dividends?

One of the most common questions from dividend investors is how much capital it takes to replace a paycheck. The answer depends entirely on your portfolio's average dividend yield. Here is what you would need invested at different yields to generate $12,000 per year ($1,000 per month) in dividend income:

Investment needed for $1,000/month in dividends by yield with example holdings
Dividend YieldInvestment NeededExample Stocks/ETFs
2%$600,000MSFT, V, HD
3%$400,000KO, PG, JNJ
4%$300,000BMY, PSA, OKE
5%$240,000O, ABBV, MO
6%$200,000LYB, ENB, EPD

These figures assume no dividend growth or reinvestment. In practice, dividend growth and DRIP can significantly reduce the capital needed over time. Try the calculator above to model your own timeline with growth and contributions.

How Much Dividend Income Does Your Investment Generate?

Annual dividend income at common yield levels. Assumes no reinvestment.

Annual dividend income at common yield levels by investment amount
Investment2% Yield3% Yield4% Yield5% Yield7% Yield
$10,000$200$300$400$500$700
$25,000$500$750$1,000$1,250$1,750
$50,000$1,000$1,500$2,000$2,500$3,500
$100,000$2,000$3,000$4,000$5,000$7,000
$250,000$5,000$7,500$10,000$12,500$17,500
$500,000$10,000$15,000$20,000$25,000$35,000
$1,000,000$20,000$30,000$40,000$50,000$70,000

How Much Do You Need to Invest for Monthly Dividend Income?

Required portfolio size to generate your target monthly income at different yield levels.

Portfolio size required for monthly dividend income goals at different yields
Monthly Goal3% Yield4% Yield5% Yield7% Yield
$500/mo$200,000$150,000$120,000$85,714
$1,000/mo$400,000$300,000$240,000$171,429
$2,000/mo$800,000$600,000$480,000$342,857
$3,000/mo$1,200,000$900,000$720,000$514,286
$5,000/mo$2,000,000$1,500,000$1,200,000$857,143
$10,000/mo$4,000,000$3,000,000$2,400,000$1,714,286

Assumes consistent annual yield. Actual income varies with market conditions and dividend changes.

More Dividend Calculators

FAQ

Dividend Calculator FAQ

Dividend income is calculated by multiplying your current portfolio value by the dividend yield. For example, a $10,000 portfolio with a 3.5% yield generates $350 per year in dividends, or about $29 per month.
Dividend reinvestment (DRIP) means using your dividend payments to buy more shares of the same stock. This creates compound growth — your dividends earn dividends. Over time, reinvesting dividends can significantly increase both your portfolio value and your future dividend income.
Dividend growth rate is the annualized percentage increase in a company's dividend payments over time. Many established companies (Dividend Aristocrats) raise their dividends every year. For example, a 5% growth rate means a $1.00 dividend this year becomes $1.05 next year. Use the dividend growth rate input in the calculator to model how rising dividends increase your income over time.
The average S&P 500 dividend yield is around 1.3-1.5%. A yield of 2-4% is generally considered solid for established companies. Yields above 5% may indicate higher risk — though REITs often have higher yields due to their required payout structure (learn about how REIT dividends are taxed). The right yield depends on your income goals and risk tolerance.
To generate $50,000 per year in dividend income at a 3.5% yield, you would need approximately $1,428,571 invested. Use the dividend income calculator to find exactly how much you need to invest for a specific monthly income goal at different yields.
MerryDiv is a dividend tracker that connects to your brokerage accounts and tracks every dividend payment automatically. Once you start investing, connect your accounts to see your real dividend income instead of estimates.
Yes. In the U.S., dividends are generally taxable in the year they are received. Qualified dividends — paid by most U.S. corporations and held for at least 60 days — are taxed at the preferential long-term capital gains rate (0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your income). Non-qualified (ordinary) dividends, including most REIT distributions, are taxed at your ordinary income tax rate, which can be as high as 37%. Dividends in tax-advantaged accounts like Roth IRAs or 401(k)s are not taxed when received.
It depends on your stage. During wealth accumulation, DRIP (reinvesting dividends) is typically better because it compounds your returns — your dividends buy more shares that generate more dividends. Over 20-30 years, the difference can be substantial. Once you need income (e.g., retirement), switching to cash dividends provides a steady income stream without selling shares. Use the DRIP comparison view above to see the difference for your specific scenario.
Most financial planners suggest targeting a portfolio yield of 3-4% for retirement income. This range balances income generation with sustainability — yields much higher than 5% often indicate elevated risk of dividend cuts. A diversified portfolio of Dividend Aristocrats and quality REITs can often achieve 3-4% while also growing the dividend over time to keep pace with inflation.
When you own shares of a dividend-paying company, the company distributes a portion of its profits to shareholders — this is a dividend. Most U.S. stocks pay dividends quarterly, though some pay monthly or annually. The amount you receive depends on how many shares you own and the dividend per share. For example, if you own 100 shares of a stock that pays $1.00 per share quarterly, you receive $100 every quarter ($400/year). You can take dividends as cash or reinvest them to buy more shares (DRIP).
At a 3% yield, $100,000 generates $3,000 per year ($250/month). At 4%, it's $4,000/year. At 5%, $5,000/year. With DRIP and a 7% annual dividend growth rate, that $100,000 portfolio could produce over $10,000 per year within 10 years. The exact amount depends on the stocks you hold, whether you reinvest, and how fast those companies raise their dividends.
To earn $1,000 per month ($12,000/year), you need $600,000 at a 2% yield, $400,000 at 3%, $300,000 at 4%, or $240,000 at 5%. These assume no dividend growth. With DRIP and annual dividend increases, you can reach the same income level with less starting capital over time. Use the calculator above to model your specific path.
The S&P 500 average dividend yield is currently around 1.3-1.5%, which is near historic lows. In the 1980s, it was closer to 4-5%. This decline reflects a shift toward share buybacks and growth investing. For higher income, dividend-focused ETFs like SCHD (3-3.5%), VYM (2.8-3.2%), or individual Dividend Aristocrats typically offer yields 2-3x higher than the S&P 500 average.
ETF dividends follow the same tax rules as individual stock dividends. Qualified dividends from ETFs holding U.S. stocks (like SCHD or VYM) are taxed at the lower capital gains rate (0-20%). Non-qualified dividends, including those from REIT ETFs and bond ETFs, are taxed at your ordinary income rate (up to 37%). ETFs report the breakdown on Form 1099-DIV each year. Dividends in tax-advantaged accounts (IRA, 401k, Roth) are not taxed when received. Learn more about REIT dividend taxation.
Most U.S. dividend stocks pay quarterly (4 times per year). Some REITs and closed-end funds pay monthly — Realty Income (O) is the best-known monthly payer. A few companies pay semi-annually or annually (more common with European stocks). You can build a portfolio of quarterly payers with staggered schedules to receive dividends every month. Use the dividend calendar to see how payment schedules work.
Yield on cost (YOC) measures your dividend income relative to what you originally paid for the shares — not the current market price. If you bought a stock at $50 with a $1.50 annual dividend (3% yield) and the dividend has since grown to $3.00, your yield on cost is 6% ($3.00 / $50), even though new buyers see a lower current yield. YOC is why dividend growth investors are willing to accept lower starting yields.
Yes, many retirees use dividend income to cover living expenses. The key is building a portfolio large enough that the annual dividends meet your spending needs without selling shares. At a 3.5% yield, a $1 million portfolio generates $35,000/year. The advantage over the traditional 4% withdrawal rule is that you never deplete your principal — the income continues as long as the companies keep paying. The risk is dividend cuts during recessions, which is why diversification across 20-30 stocks or dividend ETFs is important. Learn more about dividend-based FIRE strategies.

Disclaimer: This calculator provides hypothetical projections based on the inputs you provide and general assumptions. It is not a prediction of actual dividend income or investment returns. When a tax rate is set, it is applied as a flat rate to all dividend income; actual tax treatment depends on your filing status, income level, and the type of dividends received. Calculations do not account for fees, inflation, market conditions, dividend cuts, or any other variable factors. Investing involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance does not guarantee future results. The information provided is for illustrative and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or tax advice. You should consult a qualified financial professional and consider your personal circumstances before making any investment decisions. MerryDiv does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of these calculations and is not responsible for any decisions made based on this tool.

See Your Actual Dividend Income

Done projecting? Connect your brokerage and track what you're really earning.

Connect Your Accounts — Free

Related Resources