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Home›Investing & Wealth›Building Wealth›Investing Basics

What Is a Dividend?

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
2 sources5 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • A dividend is a distribution of company earnings to shareholders, usually paid quarterly as cash or additional shares
  • Dividend yield (annual dividend ÷ stock price) helps identify income-paying stocks; high yields (>5%) can signal financial trouble
  • Dividend-paying stocks are often mature companies; growth stocks typically reinvest profits and pay no dividends
  • Dividend aristocrats (25+ years of dividend increases) provide stable income and have historically outperformed non-dividend payers
  • Dividends are taxed differently than capital gains: qualified dividends face lower tax rates (0-20%) vs. ordinary income rates (up to 37%)
On this page
  • How Dividends Work
  • Dividend Yield
  • Dividend Types
  • Dividend Payment Schedule
  • Growth Stocks vs. Dividend Stocks
  • Dividend Aristocrats
  • Dividend Sustainability
  • Dividend Taxation
  • Dividend Reinvestment
  • Dividend Yield vs. Total Return
  • When Companies Cut Dividends
  • Dividends in a Portfolio
  • The Bottom Line

A dividend is a distribution of a portion of a company's earnings paid to shareholders, usually quarterly.

How Dividends Work

When a company earns profit, management decides whether to:

  1. Reinvest profit in the business (retain earnings)
  2. Distribute profit to shareholders (declare dividends)

Most companies do both: reinvest some, distribute some.

Example: Apple

Apple earned $99.8 billion in fiscal 2022. It paid:

  • $3.28 in dividends per share annually ($100+ billion total)
  • Retained the rest for R&D, buybacks, and reserves

If you owned 100 Apple shares at $150/share:

  • Annual dividend received: $328
  • Dividend yield: $328 ÷ $15,000 = 2.19%

Dividend Yield

Dividend Yield = Annual Dividend Per Share ÷ Stock Price

Example: Stock price $100, annual dividend $3 Yield = $3 ÷ $100 = 3%

Yield comparisons:

  • Apple: 2.19% yield (lower; growth stock)
  • Procter & Gamble: 2.50% yield (moderate; mature stock)
  • Utility companies: 3-5% yield (high; stable, slow-growth)
  • REITs: 4-6% yield (very high; required to distribute 90% of earnings)

Dividend Types

Cash dividends: Most common. Pays you money. Example: $0.82 per share paid quarterly.

Stock dividends: Company issues new shares instead of cash. Example: 0.5% stock dividend means 100 shares becomes 100.5 shares.

Benefit: Stock dividends are automatically reinvested; cash dividends require active reinvestment.

Dividend Payment Schedule

Ex-dividend date: The date you must own the stock to receive the dividend. If you buy after this date, you don't get the upcoming dividend.

Record date: The date the company records who owns shares (usually 1-2 days after ex-dividend)

Payment date: When the dividend is actually paid (usually weeks later)

Declaration date: When the company announces the dividend amount

Typically, dividends are paid quarterly (every 3 months). Some annual, some monthly.

Growth Stocks vs. Dividend Stocks

Growth stocks (Apple, Amazon, Tesla historically):

  • Reinvest all earnings in growth
  • Pay no or low dividends
  • Return comes from stock price appreciation
  • Higher expected returns but higher volatility
  • Example: Amazon reinvested profits for 20+ years; paid no dividends

Dividend stocks (Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, utilities):

  • Mature, stable companies
  • Pay regular dividends
  • Stock price appreciation is modest
  • Return comes from dividend yield + modest appreciation
  • Example: Utilities provide 3-5% yield but rarely appreciate

Dividend Aristocrats

Companies that have increased dividends for 25+ consecutive years. These are typically:

  • Johnson & Johnson
  • Coca-Cola
  • Procter & Gamble
  • Walmart

Dividend aristocrats have historically outperformed non-dividend payers, returning ~3% higher annually. This suggests sustainable earnings and management discipline.

Dividend Sustainability

Warning signs:

  • Extremely high yield (>8%): Company is struggling; stock price crashed, making yield look high
  • Declining earnings: Can't sustain the dividend long-term
  • Increasing debt: Company is borrowing to pay dividends
  • Slowing dividend growth: Company's dividend increases are slowing

Green flags:

  • 25+ year history of increases (dividend aristocrats)
  • Yield 3-5%: Sustainable
  • Earnings growing faster than dividend: Lots of room for dividend growth

Dividend Taxation

Qualified dividends (most dividends):

  • Taxed at long-term capital gains rates: 0%, 15%, or 20%
  • Much better than ordinary income (up to 37%)
  • Requirement: Hold stock 60+ days around ex-dividend date

Non-qualified dividends:

  • Taxed as ordinary income (up to 37%)
  • Less common (usually from funds)

Example: $1,000 dividend income

  • Qualified dividend, 22% tax bracket: $150 tax (15% rate)
  • Non-qualified dividend, 22% tax bracket: $220 tax (22% rate)
  • Difference: $70 less tax on qualified dividends

This tax advantage is why dividend-paying stocks are especially valuable in taxable accounts (not retirement accounts).

Dividend Reinvestment

DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Plan): Automatically use dividends to buy more shares.

Example: $1,000 annual dividend, $100 stock price

  • Without DRIP: Receive $1,000 cash; doesn't compound
  • With DRIP: Buy 10 new shares; next year earn dividends on 10+ shares

Over 30 years, DRIP dramatically amplifies returns through compounding.

Dividend Yield vs. Total Return

Dividend yield alone is misleading:

Stock A: 4% dividend yield, 0% price appreciation Stock B: 2% dividend yield, 8% price appreciation

Total return: A has 4%; B has 10%. B is better despite lower yield.

Total return = Dividend yield + Price appreciation

Yield matters, but not in isolation.

When Companies Cut Dividends

During recessions or financial stress, companies often cut dividends:

2008 crisis: Hundreds of companies cut dividends COVID-19 (2020): Many suspended dividends

Results:

  • Stock prices crash further (double blow: bad earnings + no dividend)
  • Investors who relied on dividend income are hurt
  • Dividend aristocrats that maintain or grow dividends through crises demonstrate strength

This is why dividend reliability and history matter. A 30-year dividend history is more valuable than a 5% yield.

Dividends in a Portfolio

For growth: Minimize dividend exposure (growth stocks reinvest; higher long-term returns)

For income: Maximize dividend exposure (utilities, REITs, dividend aristocrats; steady income)

Balanced approach: Mix growth and dividend stocks. Dividends provide income; growth stocks provide capital appreciation.

The Bottom Line

Dividends are one component of stock returns (the other is price appreciation). Dividend-paying stocks are typically mature, stable companies. Dividend aristocrats with 25+ year histories of increases have proven their sustainability. Dividends are tax-advantaged in taxable accounts, making them especially valuable there.

For pure wealth building over 30+ years, growth stocks (reinvesting earnings) may outperform. For current income, dividend stocks are valuable. Most investors benefit from a mix.

◆ Sources

  1. Dividend Explained — Investopedia
  2. Stocks — Investor.gov
On this page
  • How Dividends Work
  • Dividend Yield
  • Dividend Types
  • Dividend Payment Schedule
  • Growth Stocks vs. Dividend Stocks
  • Dividend Aristocrats
  • Dividend Sustainability
  • Dividend Taxation
  • Dividend Reinvestment
  • Dividend Yield vs. Total Return
  • When Companies Cut Dividends
  • Dividends in a Portfolio
  • The Bottom Line
◆ Related reading
  • Your Complete Financial Picture: Why Integration Matters More Than Individual Optimization
  • What Is Compound Interest?
  • What is an index fund?
  • The Principal-Agent Problem: When the Person You Hired Has Different Goals
All Investing Basics →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

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