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NVIT Dividend Calculator
YieldMax NVDA Performance & Distribution Target 25 ETF. Project income and DRIP growth with NVIT’s real price, payout and historical growth rate, refreshed daily.
Data updated Jul 17, 2026
| Year | Shares | Div / Share | Dividends | Cumulative | Invested | Portfolio | YOC |
|---|
Hypothetical projection with constant growth rates. Dividends shown net of the tax setting. Not a prediction.
| Ex-dividend date | Amount / share | Change |
|---|---|---|
| Jul 14, 2026 | $0.2400 | +6.2% |
| Jul 7, 2026 | $0.2260 | +0.9% |
| Jun 30, 2026 | $0.2240 | -7.1% |
| Jun 23, 2026 | $0.2410 | +1.7% |
| Jun 16, 2026 | $0.2370 | -6.3% |
| Jun 9, 2026 | $0.2530 | +3.3% |
| Jun 2, 2026 | $0.2450 | -3.5% |
| May 27, 2026 | $0.2540 |
More NVIT data
- NVIT full dividend history: every payment on record, annual totals and growth chart.
- NVIT ex-dividend date: next estimated payment and how the dates work.
- NVIT vs QYLD: yield, growth and payout schedule side by side.
- NVIT vs ULTY: yield, growth and payout schedule side by side.
- NVIT vs VYM: yield, growth and payout schedule side by side.
NVIT dividend FAQ
How much does NVIT pay in dividends?
NVIT currently pays $0.2400 per share per payment on a weekly schedule. Over the trailing twelve months it has paid $7.82 per share, a yield of 16.01% at the current price of $48.80.
How much income would $10,000 in NVIT generate?
At the current TTM rate, a $10,000 position in NVIT would generate approximately $1,601 per year, or about $133.45 per month before taxes. Use the calculator above to model reinvestment and growth.
When is the next NVIT dividend?
Based on its historical weekly payment pattern, the next NVIT ex-dividend date is estimated around Jul 21, 2026. This is an estimate until officially declared. See the NVIT ex-dividend date page for the payment timeline.
Is NVIT dividend growing?
Over the past 5 years the NVIT payout trend has been irregular. Model your own assumptions with the growth field above.
What is a realistic dividend growth rate for the projection?
The best anchor is the ticker's own history: no long-run trend available yet. High current yields usually come with lower growth, and vice versa.