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Your personal Dividend Calendar

Every upcoming ex-dividend and payment date for the stocks you actually own — not a generic market calendar. Sync your brokerage and REWD builds a calendar of exactly when each dividend hits and how much, across every holding, updated automatically.

What is a dividend calendar?

A dividend calendar is a schedule of the dates that matter for dividend income: when a payment is announced, the ex-dividend cutoff to qualify for it, and when the cash actually lands. A personal dividend calendar filters all of that down to the stocks you own — so instead of scanning a market-wide list of thousands of tickers, you see your portfolio's income, dated.

REWD builds that calendar for you. Connect a brokerage and it reads your holdings (read-only), then lays out every upcoming ex-dividend and payment date with the dollar amount for each position. Prefer to start free? Add holdings manually and REWD assembles the same calendar from your entries.

The four dates on every dividend calendar

Declaration date

The day the company announces the dividend, its amount, and the record and payment dates.

Ex-dividend date

The cutoff. You must own the stock before this date to receive the dividend. Buy on or after it and the seller gets the payment.

Record date

The day the company checks its books for shareholders of record. Usually one business day after the ex-dividend date.

Payment date

The day the dividend actually lands in your brokerage account as cash (or reinvested shares, if DRIP is on).

Your calendar vs. a generic market calendar

A market dividend calendar lists ex-dividend dates for the whole market — thousands of stocks you don't hold. REWD's calendar is filtered to your holdings, with your share counts, showing your expected income on each date — plus a 12-month forward projection using each holding's real growth rate.

Frequently asked questions

What is a dividend calendar?

A dividend calendar is a schedule of upcoming dividend dates — declaration, ex-dividend, record, and payment dates — for one or more stocks. A personalized dividend calendar shows those dates only for the stocks you actually own, so you can see exactly when income is coming and how much.

What is an ex-dividend date?

The ex-dividend date is the cutoff for a dividend. To receive the next payment you must own the shares before the ex-dividend date. If you buy on or after it, the previous owner receives that dividend instead. It's the single most important date on a dividend calendar.

How do I see a dividend calendar for my own portfolio?

Connect your brokerage to REWD. It reads your holdings (read-only) and builds a calendar of every upcoming ex-dividend and payment date across all your positions, with the dollar amount for each — automatically, no manual entry. You can also add holdings manually on the free plan to build the calendar by hand.

Is there a free dividend calendar?

Yes. On REWD's free plan you can add holdings manually and see their upcoming ex-dividend and payment dates. Automatic brokerage sync — which keeps the calendar current without any manual entry — is a paid feature starting at $9.99/month.

How far ahead does the dividend calendar project?

REWD shows confirmed upcoming ex-dividend and payment dates as companies declare them, and projects forward income for the next 12 months using each holding's real payment frequency and 5-year dividend growth rate — so you see both what's confirmed and what's expected.

How is this different from a market dividend calendar?

Generic market calendars (on sites like TradingView or Investing.com) list ex-dividend dates for the whole market — thousands of stocks you don't own. REWD's calendar is filtered to your portfolio: only your holdings, with your share counts, showing your actual expected income on each date.

See your dividends on a calendar

Free to start. Sync your brokerage from $9.99/mo to keep every ex-dividend and payment date current automatically.

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This tool is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, financial, tax, or legal advice. Consult a licensed professional before making investment decisions.

Past performance does not guarantee future results. All projections are hypothetical estimates based on user-provided inputs and may differ materially from actual outcomes.

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