Model how reinvested dividends compound — DRIP growth, dividend income, DRIP vs taking cash, dividend and price growth, payout frequency, ongoing contributions, estimated taxes, and yield on cost. Six modes, payout-level detail, and a downloadable Excel workbook, in any currency.
Educational estimate only — dividends are not guaranteed and may be cut or suspended. Not investment advice.
Your inputs
Presets
$
$
≈ 200 starting shares
%
≈ $1.50 per share per year
%
Can be negative for a shrinking payout.
%
Can be negative. An assumption, not a forecast.
years
%
100% = full DRIP · 0% = take all cash · anything between = partial.
Off = whole shares only; leftover cash waits for the next payout.
Ongoing contributions (optional) ▾
$
DRIP projection · Reinvesting 100% of dividends
Final portfolio value
$61,666
From $10,000 over 20.0 years.
Final share count
318.71
Started with 200.
Annual dividend income at end
$1,208
≈ $101/mo · $302/qtr run-rate.
Yield on cost
12.08%
End income ÷ total invested.
Total dividends earned
$13,143
Dividends reinvested
$13,143
Cost basis estimate
$23,143
Total invested + dividends reinvested. Actual basis depends on your broker records.
DRIP advantage vs taking cash
$13,049
Total return
516.66%
$51,666 gain on $10,000 invested.
Annualized return (approx.)
9.52%
Per year, compounded.
What this means
You start with 200 shares at $50.00 ($10,000). At a 3.00% yield, the first-year dividend is about $300.
With full reinvestment, dividends buy more shares every payout — the position grows to 318.71 shares and an estimated $61,666 after 20.0 years.
The reinvestment path ends about $13,049 ahead of taking every dividend as cash (counting the cash as kept, not spent).
Yield on cost ends at about 12.08% — the projected end dividend measured against what you invested, not against the future price.
This is a projection, not a forecast. It assumes steady price growth, steady dividend growth, and uninterrupted payouts — real dividends can be cut or suspended.
Includes your inputs, dividend projection, DRIP vs cash comparison, formulas, and disclaimer.
Projection charts
Illustrative only — these repeat your growth assumptions every year. Not a forecast.
With reinvestment vs taking cash
Reinvesting (100%)Taking cash (value + cash kept)
Annual dividend income over time
Annual dividend income (run-rate)
Share count growth
Shares (reinvesting)Shares (no reinvestment)
Where the dividends went
Reinvested $13,143
Year-by-year projection
Year-by-year dividend reinvestment projection. The condensed mobile view shows year, dividends, end shares, end value, and return to date; “Show all columns” reveals start shares, prices, yield, yield on cost, reinvested, cash, and new shares. Every value also appears in the downloadable workbook.
Year
Start shares
Start price
Div / share
Yield
Yield on cost
Dividends
Reinvested
Cash
New shares
End shares
End price
End value
Return to date
Year 1
200
$50.00
$1.50
3.00%
3.08%
$300
$300
$0
5.61
205.61
$53.50
$11,000
10.0%
Year 2
205.61
$53.50
$1.58
2.94%
3.33%
$324
$324
$0
5.66
211.26
$57.25
$12,094
20.9%
Year 3
211.26
$57.25
$1.65
2.89%
3.59%
$349
$349
$0
5.7
216.97
$61.25
$13,290
32.9%
Year 4
216.97
$61.25
$1.74
2.83%
3.87%
$377
$377
$0
5.75
222.72
$65.54
$14,597
46.0%
Year 5
222.72
$65.54
$1.82
2.78%
4.17%
$406
$406
$0
5.79
228.51
$70.13
$16,025
60.2%
Year 6
228.51
$70.13
$1.91
2.73%
4.49%
$437
$437
$0
5.83
234.34
$75.04
$17,584
75.8%
Year 7
234.34
$75.04
$2.01
2.68%
4.83%
$471
$471
$0
5.87
240.2
$80.29
$19,286
92.9%
Year 8
240.2
$80.29
$2.11
2.63%
5.19%
$507
$507
$0
5.9
246.11
$85.91
$21,143
111.4%
Year 9
246.11
$85.91
$2.22
2.58%
5.59%
$545
$545
$0
5.93
252.04
$91.92
$23,168
131.7%
Year 10
252.04
$91.92
$2.33
2.53%
6.00%
$586
$586
$0
5.96
258
$98.36
$25,376
153.8%
Year 11
258
$98.36
$2.44
2.48%
6.45%
$630
$630
$0
5.99
263.99
$105.24
$27,783
177.8%
Year 12
263.99
$105.24
$2.57
2.44%
6.93%
$677
$677
$0
6.01
270.01
$112.61
$30,405
204.1%
Year 13
270.01
$112.61
$2.69
2.39%
7.44%
$727
$727
$0
6.04
276.04
$120.49
$33,261
232.6%
Year 14
276.04
$120.49
$2.83
2.35%
7.98%
$781
$781
$0
6.06
282.1
$128.93
$36,370
263.7%
Year 15
282.1
$128.93
$2.97
2.30%
8.56%
$838
$838
$0
6.07
288.17
$137.95
$39,754
297.5%
Year 16
288.17
$137.95
$3.12
2.26%
9.18%
$899
$899
$0
6.09
294.26
$147.61
$43,435
334.4%
Year 17
294.26
$147.61
$3.27
2.22%
9.83%
$963
$963
$0
6.1
300.36
$157.94
$47,439
374.4%
Year 18
300.36
$157.94
$3.44
2.18%
10.54%
$1,033
$1,033
$0
6.11
306.47
$169.00
$51,792
417.9%
Year 19
306.47
$169.00
$3.61
2.14%
11.28%
$1,106
$1,106
$0
6.12
312.59
$180.83
$56,524
465.2%
Year 20
312.59
$180.83
$3.79
2.10%
12.08%
$1,185
$1,185
$0
6.12
318.71
$193.48
$61,666
516.7%
Dividend reinvestment (DRIP) uses each dividend to buy more shares, so the next dividend is paid on a larger position. Starting shares = Investment ÷ Share Price; each payout, New Shares = After-Tax Dividend × Reinvestment % ÷ Price. Use the modes at the top of the calculator for income projections, DRIP vs cash, taxes, an income goal, or a two-investment comparison.
What this tool shows
DRIP projection with payout frequency, contributions, and partial reinvestment
Dividend income now and projected — monthly, quarterly, and annual
DRIP vs taking cash, with the advantage in money and extra shares
After-tax reinvestment with an exempt allowance and per-payout fees
A dividend income goal solver and a two-investment comparison
Yield on cost, total return, annualized return, and cost-basis tracking
Updated 15 June 2026 · Works in any currency
Fast answers
What does this calculator do?
It projects how reinvesting dividends compounds your shares, income, and portfolio value over time — across six modes.
Do I need a real stock ticker?
No. You enter your own yield and growth assumptions, so it models any dividend payer, in any currency.
Is this financial advice?
No — it is an educational estimate. Dividends are not guaranteed and can be cut or suspended at any time.
Is it free to use?
Yes. It is free, needs no sign-in, and runs entirely in your browser.
How to use this dividend reinvestment calculator
Pick a mode. Choose DRIP Projection, Dividend Income, DRIP vs Cash, Net DRIP After Tax, Dividend Goal, or Compare Two Investments at the top of the calculator.
Enter your position. Type an investment amount or a share count, plus the share price. The calculator shows the equivalent starting shares or starting investment instantly.
Set the dividend assumptions. Enter the dividend yield, how often it is paid (monthly, quarterly, semiannual, annual), and the yearly dividend and price growth you want to assume — both can be negative.
Tune the behaviour. Choose how much of each dividend to reinvest (0–100%), whether fractional shares are allowed, optional ongoing contributions, and — in tax mode — an estimated dividend tax rate, exempt allowance, and reinvestment fee.
Read the results. See the final value, share count, dividend income (monthly, quarterly, annual), yield on cost, total and annualized return, the DRIP advantage, charts, and a year-by-year table with payout-level detail.
Download the workbook. Click “Download DRIP XLSX” for a multi-sheet Excel report — your inputs, the projection, payout detail, DRIP vs cash, formulas, and a disclaimer. The Engine sheet recalculates if you edit the inputs in Excel.
What dividend reinvestment is, and what a DRIP does
A dividend is the portion of a company’s or fund’s earnings paid out to shareholders, usually on a regular schedule — quarterly in the US, semiannually or annually in many other markets, monthly for some funds. Dividend reinvestment means using that cash to buy more of the same shares instead of keeping it.
A DRIP — dividend reinvestment plan — automates this. Each payout buys additional shares, often commission-free and often in fractional amounts, so every unit of the dividend goes back to work. Nothing about a DRIP changes what the investment earns; it changes what happens to the earnings. The effect is the same compounding mechanism as reinvested interest: dividends buy shares, the new shares pay dividends, and the cycle repeats on a growing base.
DRIP vs taking dividends as cash
Reinvesting and taking cash are both legitimate strategies that answer different needs. Reinvestment maximises long-run compounding: the share count rises with every payout, and after a decade or two the gap versus the cash path can be substantial — the DRIP vs Cash mode quantifies it for your exact assumptions.
Taking cash makes sense when you need the income to live on, when you want to redirect money into other opportunities or rebalance, or when you do not want to increase your exposure to one investment. Reinvestment quietly concentrates your portfolio in the same stock or fund — compounding works both ways, and a DRIP into a falling investment buys more of something losing value. The honest comparison counts the cash path’s dividends as kept, not vanished, which is exactly how this calculator scores it.
Dividend yield vs dividend growth
Dividend yield is the annual dividend divided by the current price — the income you get per unit invested today. Dividend growth is how fast the payout itself rises each year. A 6% yield that never grows and a 2% yield growing 10% a year are very different machines: the first pays more now, the second may pay far more later and usually signals a healthier underlying business.
Long-horizon income investors often care more about growth than headline yield, because growth compounds the payout itself while reinvestment compounds the share count — the two multiply together. Try the Compare Two Investments mode with a high-yield/low-growth leg against a low-yield/high-growth leg and watch where the crossover happens for your horizon.
Yield on cost, explained
Yield on cost (YOC) is your current annual dividend income divided by what you originally invested. Buy at $50 with a $1.50 dividend and your starting YOC is 3%. If the dividend grows to $3 over the years, your YOC is 6% even if the market yield for new buyers is still 3% — because your cost never changed.
YOC is motivating but easy to misuse. It does not say whether holding is better than switching — that depends on today’s alternatives, not yesterday’s price. Treat it as a progress meter for an income strategy, not as proof an investment is still the best choice. This calculator reports YOC against your total invested (initial plus contributions), so adding money keeps the figure honest.
Why payout frequency matters (a little)
Monthly payouts compound slightly faster than annual ones at the same yield, because reinvested money starts earning sooner. The difference is real but modest — switching from annual to quarterly matters far less than a 1-point change in yield or growth. The calculator simulates the actual payout schedule, so you can see the true size of the effect rather than guessing.
Frequency matters more for whole-share DRIPs: small, frequent payouts may not cover a full share, leaving cash idle until enough accumulates. The fractional-shares toggle models exactly this.
Why the growth assumptions dominate the result
Over 20 years, almost everything in the result comes from three assumptions: price growth, dividend growth, and yield. Small changes compound into large differences — 5% vs 7% price growth changes a 20-year outcome by roughly a third. That is why this page calls results projections, not forecasts.
Useful practice: run a base case with conservative numbers, then stress it — set dividend growth negative to simulate a shrinking payout, or price growth negative for a falling market. A plan that only works at optimistic assumptions is not a plan.
Taxes, cost basis, and fees
In taxable accounts, many countries tax dividends in the year they are paid even when reinvested — you may owe tax on cash you never saw. The Net DRIP After Tax mode applies an estimated flat rate (with an optional annual exempt allowance) to every payout and reinvests only what is left, then reports the cumulative tax drag against a no-tax run. It is an estimate: real tax depends on your country, account type, and whether the dividend is ordinary, qualified, exempt, or a return of capital.
Every reinvested dividend is also a new purchase with its own cost basis. Decades of quarterly reinvestments create hundreds of small lots; without records, the eventual sale is painful to report. Most brokers track this, but the workbook’s payout sheet doubles as a record of what was bought and at what price. Fees matter too — a fixed commission per reinvestment can quietly consume a small payout, which is why the fee input exists.
In tax-advantaged or tax-deferred accounts, dividends usually compound without immediate tax, which is why a DRIP is often most powerful there. Withdrawal rules and taxes still apply at the account level.
Fractional vs whole-share reinvestment
Broker DRIPs typically buy fractional shares, putting 100% of each dividend to work immediately. Some plans and brokers only buy whole shares: the dividend accumulates as cash until it covers a full share. The whole-share toggle simulates this honestly — leftover cash is tracked, not lost — and the drag is visible mostly for small positions with high share prices.
The risks: high yields, dividend cuts, and concentration
A very high dividend yield is often a warning, not a gift. Yield rises mechanically when the price falls, so a double-digit yield frequently means the market expects the payout to be cut. Dividend cuts and suspensions are routine in recessions — and a cut hits a DRIP twice, shrinking both the income and the compounding rate. This calculator deliberately warns rather than celebrates when you enter unusually high yields.
Reinvestment also compounds concentration: every payout increases your stake in the same investment. For a single stock, that is a meaningful risk; for a broad index fund, much less so. When the income matters to you, the safety of the dividend matters more than its size — payout history through recessions, payout ratio, and balance-sheet strength are where analysts look first. This tool models any numbers you give it; choosing durable numbers is the real work.
When reinvesting tends to win — and when cash may
Reinvestment tends to win when the horizon is long, the income is not needed, the account shelters taxes, and the investment itself remains worth owning. It is the default for accumulation-phase investors in diversified funds.
Cash tends to make sense in retirement when dividends fund spending, when a position has grown too large to keep feeding, when better opportunities exist elsewhere, or when tax on reinvested dividends creates cash-flow strain in a taxable account. There is no universal answer — which is why every mode here shows both paths rather than declaring a winner.
Worked examples
1. A simple 20-year DRIP projection
You invest $10,000 at $50 per share (200 shares) with a 3% dividend yield, 7% price growth, and 5% dividend growth, reinvesting every annual dividend for 20 years. The first-year dividend is 200 × $1.50 = $300. Reinvested payouts lift the share count to about 319 shares, and the position ends near $61,700 — versus about $48,600 (final value plus cash kept) if every dividend had been taken as cash. The reinvestment advantage is roughly $13,000, and yield on cost climbs to about 12.1%.
2. DRIP vs cash — where the gap comes from
Same assumptions, but compare the two paths. Taking cash keeps the share count at 200 forever: dividends total about $9,900 and the shares end near $38,700. Reinvesting spends the same dividends on extra shares, and every new share earns dividends of its own — by year 20 the reinvestor’s income is about 59% higher too. The advantage is not magic money; it is the return earned by the dividends that stayed invested.
3. A dividend income goal: $500 per month
Target income $500/month = $6,000/year at a 4% dividend yield. Required portfolio = 6,000 ÷ 0.04 = $150,000; at a $50 share price with a $2.00 dividend per share, that is 3,000 shares. The Dividend Goal mode also estimates the years to get there from your current position with dividends reinvested, or the annual contribution needed to arrive within your chosen horizon.
4. After-tax DRIP in a taxable account
A position pays $1,000 of gross dividends in a year and your estimated dividend tax rate is 20% with no exempt allowance. Tax is $200, so only $800 is reinvested — the other $200 must be paid to the tax authority even though you never received cash. Compounding that drag over 20 years typically costs several percent of final wealth; the Net DRIP After Tax mode reports the exact estimated tax drag for your inputs, and shows how an annual exempt allowance (where your country provides one) softens it.
Assumptions & limitations
Assumptions
Dividend yield converts to a per-share dividend at the starting price; the dividend per share then grows once per year at your dividend growth rate.
The share price compounds monthly at the equivalent of your annual price growth rate; payouts are reinvested at the price in the month they are paid.
The annual tax-exempt allowance (tax mode) is applied pro-rata to each payout; the tax rate is a single flat estimate.
Annualized return treats all invested money as committed for the whole period — it is approximate when contributions exist (a money-weighted IRR would differ).
The cash path counts dividends as kept, not spent or invested elsewhere.
Limitations
Dividends are not guaranteed — companies cut and suspend them, which a steady-growth projection cannot capture.
Real prices are volatile; reinvesting at a smooth monthly price differs from reinvesting at actual market prices.
Tax figures are flat-rate estimates, not a tax calculation — treatment varies by country, account type, and dividend type.
The calculator does not measure risk, dividend safety, valuation, or liquidity, and never recommends any security.
A dividend reinvestment plan automatically uses each cash dividend to buy more shares of the same investment, often commission-free and in fractional amounts. Your position grows with every payout without any action from you, and the new shares earn dividends of their own — that is the compounding engine this calculator models.
How does dividend reinvestment compound returns?
Each reinvested dividend buys additional shares, and those shares pay dividends at the next payout. The share count therefore grows geometrically rather than staying fixed. On this page’s default example ($10,000 at $50, 3% yield, 7% price growth, 5% dividend growth, 20 years), reinvestment turns 200 shares into roughly 319 and adds about $13,000 versus taking the dividends as cash.
Is DRIP better than taking dividends as cash?
Not automatically. Reinvesting usually produces a larger final value because of compounding, but taking cash is rational when you need income, want to diversify away from the position, or doubt the investment. The DRIP vs Cash mode scores both honestly — the cash path keeps its dividends, and the “advantage” is the difference in total wealth.
Are reinvested dividends taxable?
Often yes. In a regular taxable account, many countries tax dividends in the year they are paid even if you never see the cash — the reinvestment does not defer the tax. In tax-advantaged accounts (pensions, ISAs, 401(k)-type wrappers and similar), dividends usually compound without immediate tax. Rules differ by country, account, and dividend type, so verify your own treatment.
What is yield on cost?
Yield on cost is your annual dividend income divided by the amount you invested, rather than the current market price. It rises when the dividend per share grows, because your cost is fixed. It is a useful progress meter for an income plan but says nothing about whether holding remains better than alternatives available today.
Does dividend growth matter more than yield?
Over long horizons, often yes. A modest yield growing steadily can overtake a high static yield, because growth compounds the payout while reinvestment compounds the share count. Over short horizons the higher yield usually wins on income. The Compare Two Investments mode lets you find the crossover for your own assumptions.
What happens if the dividend is cut?
Your income falls immediately, and the compounding loop weakens because each payout buys fewer shares. Cuts often coincide with price falls, hurting both sides of the projection at once. You can stress-test this by entering a negative dividend growth rate — a steady-growth projection cannot model a sudden cut, but a negative trend shows the direction of the damage.
Can I reinvest only part of my dividends?
Yes. Set the reinvestment percentage anywhere from 0% to 100%. The simulator reinvests that share of each after-tax payout and treats the rest as cash income — the results, charts, tables, and the XLSX all show both streams separately.
How do fractional shares affect a DRIP?
With fractional shares, every unit of each dividend buys stock immediately — nothing idles. Whole-share plans must wait until accumulated cash covers a full share, which drags slightly on compounding, especially for small positions in high-priced shares. Toggle “Allow fractional shares” off to model this; leftover cash is tracked between payouts.
Does payout frequency change the result?
Slightly. Monthly payouts compound a little faster than annual ones at the same yield because money is reinvested sooner — typically a difference of fractions of a percent per year. It matters more for whole-share plans, where frequent small payouts can sit idle. The calculator simulates the actual schedule so you can see the real size of the effect.
What is the difference between dividend yield and dividend growth?
Yield is the dividend as a percentage of today’s price — your income rate now. Growth is the annual percentage increase in the dividend itself — how fast that income rises. High yield pays more today; high growth pays more tomorrow and compounds your yield on cost. Both feed the projection, and they often trade off against each other in real investments.
Is a high dividend yield always better?
No. Yield rises when the price falls, so an unusually high yield often signals that the market expects a cut or sees elevated risk. Chasing the highest yield frequently means buying the weakest businesses. This calculator flags double-digit yields and the comparison mode never declares the higher-yield option “better” on yield alone.
How do reinvested dividends affect cost basis?
Each reinvestment is a new purchase that adds to your total cost basis. That usually reduces the taxable gain when you eventually sell — but only if you have records. The calculator reports an estimated ending cost basis, and the workbook’s Payout Detail sheet lists every reinvestment with its date, amount, and price, which is exactly the record-keeping problem brokers and tax authorities care about.
Can this calculator predict my future dividend income?
No. It projects what would happen if your assumptions held — steady yield, steady growth, uninterrupted payouts. Real dividends change with business conditions, and prices move unpredictably. Use it to understand the mechanics and compare scenarios, not as a forecast of what any investment will pay.
Related calculators
Tools that build on the same growth and income math:
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Regular Investment CalculatorProject how regular monthly contributions grow over time — SIP-style investing, dollar-cost averaging, inflation-adjusted value, and long-term goals.
ROI CalculatorReturn on investment five ways — simple ROI, date-based ROI, net ROI after fees/taxes/income, a reverse target solver, and a two-investment comparison — with gain/loss, annualised ROI (CAGR), and a multi-sheet Excel report.
Compound Interest CalculatorSee how savings grow as interest earns interest, with adjustable contributions and compounding frequency.
Retirement CalculatorProject your retirement pot from current savings, contributions, and growth, and gauge whether it meets your goal.
Retirement Withdrawal CalculatorEstimate how long your savings may last with regular withdrawals — portfolio drawdown, safe withdrawal rate, inflation, and a year-by-year schedule. Also known as an SWP.
Sources & methodology
The simulator runs monthly: dividends are paid on your chosen schedule (DPS = price × yield, growing yearly), taxed at the estimated rate where active, and the chosen percentage is reinvested at that month’s price; yield on cost is end income ÷ total invested; total return counts cash dividends kept. Results are educational estimates. Sources verified June 2026; links open in a new tab.
Last reviewed: 15 June 2026. Formula and assumptions reviewed for accuracy. First published 10 June 2026.
Investment disclaimer
This calculator is for educational estimates only. It is not financial, investment, tax, legal, accounting, or professional advice. Dividend payments, share prices, tax rules, fees, and market returns can change. Dividends are not guaranteed and may be reduced or suspended. Verify assumptions and consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.
Built and maintained by Calculator Matters, an independent calculator project. Method reviewed against standard dividend-growth and compounding formulas and primary sources · Last reviewed 15 June 2026 · How we calculate · Found an error? [email protected]
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