Dividend Income and Yield Calculator
Enter your share count and gross dividend per share to instantly calculate net dividend income, withholding tax and dividend yield.
This tool is for informational purposes only. It reflects Turkey-specific dividend taxation with a 10% withholding tax. Verify the rules and rates against your local jurisdiction and confirm investment decisions with your broker or a licensed financial advisor.
How to Calculate Dividend Income and Net Payout
A dividend is a cash payment a public company distributes to its shareholders out of net profit. The calculation has two steps. First you find the gross dividend, then you apply withholding tax to get the net amount that lands in your account.
The Difference Between Gross and Net Dividend
Gross dividend is the total payout the company announces before tax. Net dividend is what actually lands in your account after withholding tax is deducted. The gap between the two depends entirely on the withholding rate.
Gross Dividend = Share Count × Dividend Per Share
Net Dividend = Gross Dividend × (1 − Withholding Rate)
Dividend Yield = (Dividend Per Share / Share Price) × 100
Example: 1,000 shares × 2.50 TL = 2,500 TL gross. After 10% withholding, net is 2,250 TL.
Current Withholding Tax Rates on Borsa Istanbul (BIST)
In Turkey, dividends received by individual investors from companies listed on Borsa Istanbul (BIST) are subject to a 10% income withholding tax. The rate is set by presidential decree and can change. Withholding is calculated on the gross dividend and deducted automatically by your broker before the cash hits your account.
Individual (BIST shares)
10%
Resident Corporate (Participation)
0%
Foreign Investor
Double tax treaty
What Is Dividend Yield?
Dividend yield expresses how much income a stock generates relative to its current price. It is one of the cleanest ways to compare dividend stocks against each other and against alternative income assets like deposits and bonds.
How Share Price and Dividend Payout Drive the Yield
Dividend yield moves inversely with share price. When the price rises, yield falls. When the price drops, yield jumps. A very high yield can look attractive but often signals a sharp price decline. A proper review also looks at the payout ratio and free cash flow, not just the yield.
| Share Price (TL) | Dividend Per Share (TL) | Gross Yield | Net Yield (10% withholding) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20.00 | 2.00 | 10.00% | 9.00% |
| 30.00 | 2.00 | 6.67% | 6.00% |
| 40.00 | 2.00 | 5.00% | 4.50% |
| 50.00 | 2.00 | 4.00% | 3.60% |
Why Dividend Yield Matters for Long Term Investors
Over long horizons, dividend income becomes a major slice of total equity returns. Historical studies show that a large share of long term total return comes from reinvested dividends. Companies that pay consistent dividends usually have stronger balance sheets and more predictable cash flow, which helps balance risk inside a portfolio.
Dividend Investing and the Power of Compounding
Dividend investing aims to cover living expenses with the recurring cash a portfolio produces, without active income. Compounding is the engine behind it. When each dividend is plowed back into more shares, the portfolio grows and the next dividend is bigger.
Reinvesting Dividends to Grow Your Position
Routing every dividend back into new shares grows your position step by step. The effect feels small at first, but over decades it compounds into a meaningfully larger portfolio and a much bigger income stream. Many brokers offer automatic dividend reinvestment plans, known as DRiPs, that handle this for you.
Tip: Buying more shares of the same stock with each net dividend is a strong, disciplined strategy for cost averaging and compounding.
Consistent Dividend Payers (BIST Dividend 25 Index)
The BIST Dividend 25 Index (XDIV25), published by Borsa Istanbul (BIST), tracks the 25 companies with the highest dividend yields among those that paid a dividend in each of the last three years. It is a useful starting filter when building an income focused portfolio. Inclusion is not a guarantee that future dividends will be paid. The index is rebalanced every year.
Past dividend payments do not guarantee future ones. The dividend amount is set each year at the general assembly and depends on the company's profitability.