Dividend Yield

Annual dividends per share divided by the current stock price, expressed as a percentage.

Dividend Yield — Annual dividends per share divided by the current stock price, expressed as a percentage.

Key facts

Category
Dividends
Definition
Annual dividends per share divided by the current stock price, expressed as a percentage.
Formula
Dividend Yield = Annual dividend per share / Current share price × 100
Live example
/research/stock/T
Last updated
2026-06-17

Formula

Dividend Yield = Annual dividend per share / Current share price × 100

Worked example

Stock trades at $50 paying $2 per year in dividends → 4.0% yield.

Interpretive bands

0%
Doesn't pay a dividend. Common for growth-focused companies that reinvest cash.
1 – 3%
Modest dividend. Typical for mature tech and consumer companies.
3 – 5%
High yield. Utilities, REITs, banks, telcos.
> 6%
Very high — sometimes a warning sign that the market expects a dividend cut.

How IndexAlpha uses Dividend Yield

The headline number on the Dividend card. IndexAlpha pairs yield with the Dividend Quality Index to distinguish sustainable high yields from at-risk ones.

See it live

The Dividend Yield metric shows up on every IndexAlpha research page. See it now on T — or research any stock to view its Dividend Yield.

Related terms

Common questions

What is Dividend Yield?

Annual dividends per share divided by the current stock price, expressed as a percentage.

How is Dividend Yield calculated?

Dividend Yield = Annual dividend per share / Current share price × 100. Stock trades at $50 paying $2 per year in dividends → 4.0% yield.

How does IndexAlpha use Dividend Yield?

The headline number on the Dividend card. IndexAlpha pairs yield with the Dividend Quality Index to distinguish sustainable high yields from at-risk ones.

Sources