Dividend Income: $80 Stock Paying $5 Annual Dividend, 1,000 Shares
Owning 1,000 shares of an $80 stock that pays $5 in annual dividends generates $5,000 per year at a 6.25% yield.
How to use this tool
- Enter the total annual dividend paid per share.
- Enter the current share price to get the market dividend yield.
- Enter your original cost per share to see your yield on cost.
- Add your share count to estimate total annual dividend income.
- Compare the market yield with your yield on cost over time.
See the total annual dividend income from a 1,000-share position in an $80 stock paying $5.00 per share annually.
Frequently asked questions
- How is dividend yield calculated?
- Divide the annual dividend per share by the current share price and multiply by 100. For example, a $2.50 dividend on a $50 stock yields 5%.
- What is a good dividend yield?
- It depends on the sector and interest-rate environment. Broad-market yields are often 1.5–3%, while income-focused stocks may yield 4–6%. A very high yield can be a warning sign of a falling price or an unsustainable payout.
- What is yield on cost?
- Yield on cost measures the dividend against the price you paid rather than today's price. For dividend-growth stocks held a long time, it can rise well above the current market yield.
- Does a higher yield always mean a better investment?
- No. Yield ignores price risk, dividend sustainability, and total return. A stock can have a high yield simply because its price has dropped on bad news.