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NVDA Dividend History

NVIDIA Corporation — 55 payments on record since 2012. Current yield: 0.14% (quarterly).

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NVDA Dividend History

Ex-DateAmountChangeYield
Jun 4, 2026$0.2500+2400.0%0.47%
Mar 11, 2026$0.0100+0.0%0.02%
Dec 4, 2025$0.0100+0.0%0.02%
Sep 11, 2025$0.0100+0.0%0.02%
Jun 11, 2025$0.0100+0.0%0.02%
Mar 12, 2025$0.0100+0.0%0.02%
Dec 5, 2024$0.0100+0.0%0.02%
Sep 12, 2024$0.0100+0.0%0.02%
Jun 11, 2024$0.0100+150.0%0.02%
Mar 5, 2024$0.0040+0.0%0.01%

NVDA price return since first dividend

How much NVDA's share price has moved since the first recorded payment. Pair with the dividend bars above to separate capital return from income return — together they make up total return, which headline yield alone doesn't capture.

Cumulative price return: +73912.18%

Cumulative dividends collected

Running total of per-share distributions since the first payment on record. A buy-and-hold NVDA share has collected this much in dividends.

Total collected per share since inception: $0.4837

NVDA DRIP calculator

Compound NVDA's 0.1% yield

Pre-filled with live NVDA data and 55 payments on record. Model 1, 5, or 10-year DRIP returns with after-tax math and Bull/Base/Bear scenarios. (Quarterly payments.)

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About NVDA Dividends

This page shows the complete NVDA dividend payment history, including ex-dates, payment dates, and per-share amounts. The chart above visualizes the trend of dividend payments over time, making it easy to spot increases, decreases, or irregular payouts.

NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA) is issued by NVIDIA. Dominant GPU and AI-accelerator manufacturer — the single largest beneficiary of the 2023+ AI capex boom. Pays a token dividend of $0.01/share per quarter ($0.04 annualized), yielding roughly 0.02% at current prices. Effectively a symbolic payout; NVDA is a growth stock, not an income vehicle. Management has signaled that going forward, 50%+ of free cash flow will be returned to shareholders but almost entirely via buybacks rather than dividend increases.

Open the NVDA projection tool to model how reinvesting these dividends would compound over time, or check the Total Return Analyzer to see the real yield after accounting for NAV changes.

NVDA dividend history — frequently asked questions

How often does NVDA pay dividends?
NVDA pays dividends quarterly. The dividend history table and chart above show every payment NVDA has made, with the ex-dividend date, payment date, and per-share amount. The ex-date is the cutoff — you must own NVDA before the ex-date to receive that payment; buying on or after the ex-date means you get the next one instead.
What does the NVDA dividend history chart show?
The chart plots the per-share amount of every dividend NVDA has paid, oriented left-to-right from oldest to newest. A rising trend means distributions are growing; a falling trend means they are shrinking. For NVDA, the current yield is roughly 0.14% on a trailing twelve-month basis. Pay attention to the shape of the curve — steady growth is a very different risk profile from a jagged curve with big month-to-month swings, which is common for options-income ETFs.
Are NVDA dividends qualified or ordinary?
Dividend classification for NVDA varies. Most traditional dividend ETFs and stocks produce qualified dividends — taxed at the long-term capital gains rate — but some portion may be non-qualified. Check the year-end 1099-DIV for the exact breakdown.
Why did NVDA distributions change so much month to month?
Month-to-month changes in NVDA can come from a few sources: timing of the payment relative to the ex-date calendar, special distributions, or shifts in the underlying portfolio. For most non-options-income ETFs, distributions are fairly predictable quarter-over-quarter, with occasional year-end special distributions.
Where does this NVDA dividend data come from?
Dividend records are sourced from official issuer dividend calendars and cross-referenced against press releases. Ex-dates and payment dates are the official dates as reported. For YieldMax funds specifically, we also ingest the weekly announcement press releases — that is why YieldMax ticker pages show upcoming announcements.