Enter Values
Payout Ratio Formulas
Payout Ratio Analysis
Formula Breakdown
Payout Ratio Interpretation
| Payout Ratio | Classification | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| 0% | No Dividend | No dividends declared |
| >0% – <30% | Low Payout | Growth-oriented, high reinvestment |
| 30% – <60% | Moderate Payout | Balanced dividend approach |
| 60% – <80% | High Payout | Income-oriented, mature company |
| 80% – 100% | Very High Payout | Limited reinvestment capacity |
| >100% | Unsustainable | Paying more than earnings |
Model Assumptions
- Based on current-period net income and annual (TTM) dividends
- Assumes stable dividend policy (excludes one-time special dividends)
- SGR assumes constant ROE and constant payout ratio; uses beginning-of-period equity
- Does not account for share buybacks (which also return capital to shareholders)
For educational purposes. Not financial advice. Market conventions simplified.
Understanding Dividend Payout Ratios
What Is the Dividend Payout Ratio?
The dividend payout ratio measures the proportion of a company's net income that is distributed to shareholders as dividends. It is one of the most important metrics for evaluating a company's dividend policy and its implications for growth potential.
The formula is straightforward: Payout Ratio = Dividends Paid / Net Income. The complement of this ratio is the retention ratio (or plowback ratio), which represents the share of earnings reinvested back into the business.
What you pay out + what you keep = all earnings
The Payout vs. Growth Trade-Off
High Payout Strategy
Pay dividends now
Attracts income-seeking investors. Signals maturity and confidence. Reduces internally funded growth capacity.
High Retention Strategy
Reinvest earnings
Maximizes sustainable growth rate. Supports growth without issuing new equity. Common among growth companies.
Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR)
The sustainable growth rate represents the maximum rate at which a firm can grow without issuing new equity, while maintaining its target debt-to-equity ratio (debt is allowed to grow proportionally). The formula is:
SGR = ROE × Retention Ratio
For example, a company with 20% ROE that retains 60% of earnings can sustain a 12% annual growth rate without issuing new equity. Growth above this rate requires new equity issuance or a change in capital structure.
Typical Payout Ratios by Sector
- Utilities & REITs: 60–90% (mature, regulated, stable cash flows)
- Consumer Staples: 40–60% (steady demand, moderate growth)
- Financials: 30–50% (bank capital requirements limit payouts)
- Technology: 0–30% (growth-oriented, prefer reinvestment or buybacks)
- Biotech/Startups: 0% (pre-profit or reinvesting all earnings)
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and uses simplified assumptions. Actual dividend analysis should consider share buybacks, special dividends, cash flow sustainability, and industry-specific norms. The sustainable growth rate assumes constant ROE and capital structure. This tool should not be used as the sole basis for investment decisions.