Calculator Inputs
Use the responsive calculator grid below. It displays three columns on large screens, two on medium screens, and one on mobile.
Example Data Table
This sample shows how the calculator can be used for a dividend stock scenario.
| Input / Output | Sample Value |
|---|---|
| Current Share Price | $48.50 |
| Projected Dividend Per Payment | $0.62 |
| Payment Frequency | Quarterly |
| Expected Dividend Growth | 4.00% |
| Shares Owned | 150 |
| Dividend Tax Rate | 15.00% |
| Forward Annual Dividend Per Share | $2.5792 |
| Forward Dividend Yield | 5.32% |
| Net Annual Dividend Income | $328.85 |
| Yield On Cost | 6.14% |
Formula Used
Dividend Per Payment × Payments Per Year
Base Annual Dividend Per Share × (1 + Growth Rate)
Forward Annual Dividend Per Share ÷ Current Share Price × 100
Forward Annual Dividend Per Share ÷ Average Purchase Price × 100
Forward Annual Dividend Per Share × Shares Owned × (1 - Tax Rate)
Forward Annual Dividend Per Share ÷ Desired Yield Decimal
This calculator focuses on projected future dividends instead of trailing payouts. That makes it useful when a company has recently changed its dividend or when you want to test growth and scenario assumptions.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the stock’s current market price.
- Type the projected dividend for each payment period.
- Select monthly, quarterly, semiannual, or annual payouts.
- Add shares owned to estimate your income totals.
- Enter an expected growth rate for forward projections.
- Include withholding tax to see net dividend income.
- Use purchase price to compare yield on cost.
- Set a desired yield to estimate a potential buy price.
- Add target annual income to estimate shares and capital needed.
- Use bear and bull adjustments to compare alternate payout outcomes.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is forward dividend yield?
Forward dividend yield estimates future dividend return using expected annual dividends divided by the current share price. It relies on projected payouts, not past distributions, so it is more useful for forward-looking income planning.
2. How is it different from trailing dividend yield?
Trailing yield uses dividends already paid over the last year. Forward yield uses expected future payouts. Forward yield is better for planning, but it depends on assumptions that may change with company policy or earnings performance.
3. Why include dividend growth in the calculation?
Growth helps you estimate a more realistic future payout. Companies with stable increases may produce higher forward income than trailing figures suggest. Conservative growth assumptions usually give more dependable planning results.
4. What does yield on cost show?
Yield on cost compares projected annual dividend per share with your original purchase price. It helps long-term investors see how income performance looks against the amount they actually paid for the shares.
5. Why does the calculator include taxes?
Taxes matter because gross yield can overstate real income. Adding withholding or dividend tax shows your estimated net annual and monthly cash flow, which is usually more practical for budgeting and income targets.
6. What are bear and bull adjustments used for?
They help stress-test assumptions. A bear adjustment lowers projected dividends, while a bull adjustment raises them. This shows how yield and income could shift if future payouts are weaker or stronger than expected.
7. Can this calculator tell me whether a stock is safe?
No. It estimates yield and income only. Dividend safety also depends on earnings quality, payout ratio, debt, cash flow, and management decisions. Use this tool alongside broader company analysis before investing.
8. Should I rely only on forward yield when comparing investments?
No. Forward yield is helpful, but total return, valuation, dividend consistency, balance-sheet strength, and sector risk also matter. A very high yield can sometimes signal elevated risk rather than better income quality.