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■ ETF · NYSEArca · weekly payer
SQY Dividend Calculator
YieldMax XYZ Option Income Strategy ETF. Project income and DRIP growth with SQY’s real price, payout and historical growth rate, refreshed daily.
Data updated Jul 16, 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 16, 2026 | $0.3332 | -8.9% |
| Jul 9, 2026 | $0.3659 | +47.4% |
| Jul 2, 2026 | $0.2482 | -2.1% |
| Jun 25, 2026 | $0.2534 | +27.8% |
| Jun 18, 2026 | $0.1983 | -30.1% |
| Jun 11, 2026 | $0.2838 | -25.4% |
| Jun 4, 2026 | $0.3806 | +113.1% |
| May 28, 2026 | $0.1786 |
More SQY data
- SQY full dividend history: every payment on record, annual totals and growth chart.
- SQY ex-dividend date: next estimated payment and how the dates work.
- SQY vs QYLD: yield, growth and payout schedule side by side.
- SQY vs ULTY: yield, growth and payout schedule side by side.
- SQY vs VYM: yield, growth and payout schedule side by side.
SQY dividend FAQ
How much does SQY pay in dividends?
SQY currently pays $0.3332 per share per payment on a weekly schedule. Over the trailing twelve months it has paid $22.93 per share, a yield of 218.55% at the current price of $10.49.
How much income would $10,000 in SQY generate?
At the current TTM rate, a $10,000 position in SQY would generate approximately $21,855 per year, or about $1,821.24 per month before taxes. Use the calculator above to model reinvestment and growth.
When is the next SQY dividend?
Based on its historical weekly payment pattern, the next SQY ex-dividend date is estimated around Jul 23, 2026. This is an estimate until officially declared. See the SQY ex-dividend date page for the payment timeline.
Is SQY dividend growing?
Over the past 5 years the SQY 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.