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PG Dividend Calculator

Project dividend-reinvestment (DRIP) growth, income, and yield on cost for Procter & Gamble (PG). Pre-filled with illustrative figures — edit them with current numbers.

Your scenario
$
$
%
% / yr
% / yr
yrs
%
Projected value at year 20

$441,576

You'll have invested

$130,000

Dividends received (net)

$132,871

Capital growth

$178,705

Annualized return

10.27%

Final annual dividend

$24,561

Yield on cost

18.89%

Growth over time

Line chart plotting three series by year: portfolio value, cumulative contributions, and cumulative net dividends. Over 20 years the portfolio grows to $441,576 from $130,000 contributed, including $132,871 in net dividends. The exact figures are listed in the results above this chart.

PGdividend: yield, amount & dates

Snapshot of Procter & Gamble (PG) dividend data as of Jun 15, 2026. Figures change — verify the current numbers with your broker before investing.

Current dividend

Dividend yield

~2.83%

Annual dividend (TTM)

$4.26

Frequency

Quarterly

Latest dividend
$1.089 / share
Ex-dividend date
Apr 24, 2026
Pay date
May 15, 2026

Source: dividend records via stockanalysis.com. For the latest figures, check that source or your broker. Not financial advice.

PG dividend history

Recent PG dividend payments: ex-dividend date, amount per share, and pay date.
Ex-dividend dateAmount / sharePay date
Apr 24, 2026$1.089May 15, 2026
Jan 23, 2026$1.057Feb 17, 2026
Oct 24, 2025$1.057Nov 17, 2025
Jul 18, 2025$1.057Aug 15, 2025

Recent PG dividend payments (most recent first), as of Jun 15, 2026. Amounts are per share, before any tax withholding. For the complete history see stockanalysis.com.

About PG

Procter & Gamble is a consumer-staples Dividend King with one of the longest streaks of consecutive dividend increases in the market. It is held for dependable, inflation-resistant income growth.

PG is a dividend-king stock from Procter & Gamble that distributes quarterly. Because dividend investing is about both income and the growth of that income, the calculator above lets you model three things independently for PG: the starting yield, how fast the dividend grows each year, and how fast the share price appreciates. That separation matters most for high-yield versus dividend-growth choices, where a lower starting yield that grows quickly can overtake a higher static yield over time.

How to use the PG calculator

  1. Replace the pre-filled yield with PG’s current dividend yield from your broker or the fund’s page.
  2. Set your initial investment and monthly contribution.
  3. Estimate the dividend growth rate and price growth rate. For a dividend-king stock these can differ a lot — be realistic rather than optimistic.
  4. Choose your dividend tax rate and whether to reinvest (DRIP), then read the projected value, dividends received, and yield on cost.

The full math, including how the money-weighted return is computed, is on the methodology page.

PG dividend calculator FAQ

How does this PG dividend calculator work?
It runs a month-by-month projection: each month it adds your contribution, pays a dividend based on the yield you enter, optionally reinvests it (DRIP), then applies price growth. The page loads with illustrative figures for Procter & Gamble; replace them with the current yield and your own assumptions for an accurate projection.
What yield should I use for PG?
Use PG's current dividend yield from your broker or the fund page, not the example value pre-filled here — yields move with the share price and the distribution. Enter the trailing or forward yield, whichever you prefer to model.
Does PG pay monthly or quarterly?
Procter & Gamble pays quarterly. This calculator projects annual totals and compounds monthly, so it works the same regardless of the actual payment schedule — the quarterly cadence just affects when cash actually lands in your account.
Is the PG projection a guarantee?
No. It is an educational projection based on the assumptions you enter, held constant. Real dividends can rise, be cut, or stop, and prices fluctuate. Use it to compare scenarios, not to predict returns, and never rely on a single calculator for an investment decision.

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