Highest dividend yields in the ASX 200.
A dated Top 10 snapshot of the highest gross dividend yields in the S&P/ASX 200. Data as of Apr 2026. Factual table only, not investment recommendations.
Top 10 yield snapshot
Gross trailing yield. Ranked by yield descending. S&P/ASX 200.
Scroll sideways to view all columns on smaller screens.
| 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 |
| 3 | PME | Pro Medicus Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 7.89% | Apr 28, 2026 |
| 4 | MFG | Magellan Financial Group Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 6.85% | May 06, 2026 |
| 5 | WDS | Woodside Energy Group Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 6.44% | May 22, 2026 |
| 6 | TLS | Telstra Group Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 5.91% | May 09, 2026 |
| 7 | SUN | Suncorp Group Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 5.63% | May 18, 2026 |
| 8 | NAB | National Australia Bank Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 5.48% | May 24, 2026 |
| 9 | ANZ | ANZ Group Holdings Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 5.36% | May 28, 2026 |
| 10 | WOW | Woolworths Group Ltd | Australia (ASX 200) | 4.91% | Jun 03, 2026 |
Yields shown are gross trailing snapshots. A high yield may reflect a falling share price, a special dividend, or reduced earnings. This table is not a list of stocks to buy. Verify data against primary sources before relying on it.
How to read this table
Gross yield is calculated by dividing trailing twelve-month dividends declared by each company by its share price at the snapshot date. The figure is gross of any applicable taxes or credits, including Australian franking credits where relevant. It represents a past period, not a forecast.
Ex-dividend date is the first date on which a share trades without entitlement to the declared dividend. Investors who purchase shares on or after the ex-date are not entitled to that payment. Verify ex-dates with the company or exchange before making decisions based on them.
Yield vs return: Dividend yield is one component of total shareholder return. Share price appreciation or depreciation is not reflected in the yield figure. A company with a 10% yield that falls 20% in price delivers a negative total return for that period.
Snapshot timing: Yields change daily as share prices move. The figures on this page reflect a single monthly observation. More recent data may be available from your broker, exchange, or market data provider.
Questions about ASX 200 dividend yields
What is the highest dividend yield in the ASX 200?
As of Apr 2026, the highest dividend yield in the S&P/ASX 200 is 10.21% for BHP Group Ltd (BHP). This is a trailing gross yield snapshot, not a forecast of future distributions.
How is dividend yield calculated for ASX 200 stocks?
Dividend yield is calculated by dividing a company's total dividends declared or paid over a trailing twelve-month period by its current share price, then expressing the result as a percentage. DividendTen uses trailing gross yield and labels each snapshot with a data-as-of date.
Does a high dividend yield mean a stock is a good investment?
Not necessarily. A high yield can result from a falling share price, a special one-off dividend, or an unsustainable payout policy. DividendTen presents yields as factual data points. This page is not a recommendation to buy or sell any security.
How often is this top yield list updated?
The highest dividend yield table is a dated benchmark snapshot. Each page shows a data-as-of date and verification status. Yield figures change continuously with share prices; the values here reflect a single observation, not a live feed.
Do not stop at the highest yield table
Use DividendTen guides, calculators, and yield-trap learning tools to understand why a high trailing yield needs context.