Dividend calendars, payout frequency, and yield snapshots for the ASX 200. Current rows are shown with their data verification status.
View AustraliaASX 200 · FTSE 100 · STI · Source context shown
Dividend data without
stock-picking noise.
Free dividend calendars, gross yield snapshots, and payout frequency tables for the ASX 200, FTSE 100, and Singapore STI. Every table is shown directly on the page, not behind a paywall.
Data pages disclose source status before readers reach a table. Initial or unverified data includes visible source, methodology, and non-advice caveats.
Choose a benchmark to inspect.
Each market card shows the benchmark, yield snapshot, company count, and source context before you open the table pages.
Dividend calendars, payout frequency, and yield snapshots for the Straits Times Index. Current rows are shown with their data verification status.
View SingaporeDividend calendars, payout frequency, and yield snapshots for the FTSE 100. Current rows are shown with their data verification status.
View United KingdomHighest dividend yields across benchmarks
Top yielding stocks from the ASX 200, FTSE 100, and STI. Data as of Apr 2026.
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| Rank | Ticker | Company | Market | Gross yield (%) | Ex-dividend date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | BHP | BHP Group Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 10.21% | May 15, 2026 |
| 2 | RIO | Rio Tinto Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 8.72% | May 12, 2026 |
| 1 | SIA | Singapore Airlines Ltd | Singapore (STI) | 7.12% | May 14, 2026 |
| 1 | SHEL | Shell plc | United Kingdom (FTSE 100) | 6.28% | May 15, 2026 |
| 2 | HSBA | HSBC Holdings plc | United Kingdom (FTSE 100) | 6.02% | May 22, 2026 |
Yields are factual snapshots and are not investment recommendations. Verify against primary sources.
Upcoming dividend calendar events
Ex-dividend dates, record dates, and payment dates across benchmarks.
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| Company | Ticker | Ex-dividend date | Record date | Payment date | Amount and currency | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BHP Group Ltd | BHP | May 15, 2026 | May 16, 2026 | Jun 27, 2026 | AUD 0.42 | Semi-annual |
| Singapore Airlines Ltd | SIA | May 14, 2026 | May 15, 2026 | Jun 08, 2026 | SGD 0.28 | Semi-annual |
| Shell plc | SHEL | May 15, 2026 | May 16, 2026 | Jun 30, 2026 | GBP 0.31 | Quarterly |
What is DividendTen?
DividendTen is a free, neutral dividend data resource covering three major international benchmarks: the S&P/ASX 200 (Australia), the FTSE 100 (United Kingdom), and the Straits Times Index (Singapore). Every data table is published directly on the page in plain HTML so readers and search engines can access the snapshots without logging in or downloading files.
The site is structured around three types of content for each benchmark: a gross yield snapshot, a dividend calendar showing upcoming ex-dates and payment dates, and a payout frequency table showing how benchmark companies are distributed across quarterly, semi-annual, and annual payment schedules. Each data-heavy page shows its source context and methodology notes.
DividendTen does not make buy or sell recommendations. It does not rank stocks by investment quality. It does not predict future payouts. It presents factual, dated snapshots alongside clear methodology notes so researchers, journalists, and curious investors can read the numbers in context.
The guides section explains dividend terminology, including ex-dividend dates, record dates, yield calculation methods, franking credits (relevant to ASX 200 investors), and the difference between trailing and forward yield. All guides are written in plain language and avoid promotional framing.
Data pages explain source context before they ask for trust.
DividendTen separates educational pages from financial-data pages. Data-heavy pages show their status, source context, methodology link, and non-advice caveat.
Clear methodology
Every yield figure uses a documented trailing gross calculation. Definitions, field names, and known limitations are published on the methodology page.
Read methodology ›On-page data tables
Yield rankings, calendar rows, and frequency breakdowns are rendered as HTML tables, readable by both people and search engine crawlers.
View all data ›Visible data status
Each data-heavy page shows a data-as-of date, source status, methodology link, and non-advice caveat.
See data sources ›Learn, test, and compare dividend scenarios
Interactive tools make DividendTen useful beyond static tables while keeping the site educational and neutral.
Dividend calculators
Income target, yield on cost, and simplified reinvestment scenario tools that run in the browser.
Dividend basics quiz
A five-question quiz that helps readers remember ex-date, yield, calendar, and DRIP terms.
Data stories
Readable market explainers with contextual links to DividendTen data, guides, and calculator tools.
Market comparisons
Side-by-side benchmark snapshots with visible data-status caveats and methodology links.
Dividend guides and terminology
All guides ›What is an ex-dividend date?
Plain-English explanation of ex-date, record date, and payment date used in dividend calendars.
Dividend yield explained
How gross dividend yield is calculated and why a high yield is not necessarily a buy signal.
Dividend frequency explained
Quarterly, semi-annual, and annual payout patterns across the ASX 200, FTSE 100, and STI.
Frequently asked questions
What markets does DividendTen cover?
DividendTen currently publishes dividend data for three benchmark indices: the ASX 200 (Australia), the FTSE 100 (United Kingdom), and the Straits Times Index (Singapore). Each market hub includes a yield snapshot, dividend calendar, and payout frequency table.
How often is dividend data updated?
Each data-heavy page shows a data-as-of date and a visible verification status. Current benchmark pages also disclose whether they are indexable or kept clearly caveated in search results.
What is a gross dividend yield?
Gross dividend yield divides the total dividends declared or paid by companies in a benchmark over a trailing period by the aggregate market capitalisation. It is a descriptive snapshot of the benchmark's payout level, not a forecast of future income.
Is this investment advice?
No. DividendTen publishes factual data snapshots only. Yields, calendar dates, and payout figures are presented as research inputs. Nothing on this site constitutes investment, tax, or financial advice. Always verify data against primary sources before acting on it.
What is an ex-dividend date?
The ex-dividend date is the first trading day on which a stock no longer carries the right to receive the next declared dividend. Investors who purchase shares on or after the ex-date are not entitled to that specific payment. DividendTen lists ex-dates alongside record dates and payment dates in its calendar tables.
How is the dividend calendar structured?
Each calendar row shows the company name, ticker, ex-dividend date, record date, payment date, declared amount, currency, and payment frequency. Rows are sorted by upcoming ex-date. Data is a snapshot; always confirm dates with the company or exchange before relying on them.
Turn dividend data into active learning
Use free calculators, quizzes, browser games, learning paths, and data stories built around the same market snapshots.