SBRE.L dividend calculator
Sabre Insurance Group plc
Current price £1.84
Dividend income calculator
Adjust the numbers to see how the income grows.
The snowball effect: reinvesting vs taking the cash
SBRE.L dividend health check
Very high yield
Worth watching payout ratio
Consecutive years of rises in our payment data
Next payment expected around 27 November 2026 (estimate)
How resilient is the SBRE.L dividend?
Signals point to elevated dividend-cut risk, and it has not cleared the dividend-quality screen.
The payout ratio sits at 79% of earnings. The dividend has grown about -1.3% a year over the last five years. These are a resilience check on the dividend, not a recommendation to buy or sell, and not financial advice.
Full SBRE.L resilience breakdownWe test these scores in public
Across 2,546 dividend payers, shares our Risk score put in the riskiest band went on to cut their dividend about 1 in 4 times within a year. In the safest band it was 1 in 12.
Every band is published, including the ones that flatter us least.
See the dividend safety proofSBRE.L vs similar payers
| Share | Yield | 5y dividend growth | |
|---|---|---|---|
| SBRE.LSabre Insurance Group plc | 7.33% | -1.3% | This page |
| PEPPepsiCo, Inc. | 4.24% | 6.8% | Calculate → |
| ULVR.LUnilever PLC | 3.83% | 0.2% | Calculate → |
| LGEN.LLegal & General Group Plc | 7.36% | 4.4% | Calculate → |
Frequently asked questions
- How much does SBRE.L pay per share?
- At the current rate, Sabre Insurance Group plc pays about £0.14 per share over a year, paid twice a year.
- When is the next SBRE.L dividend?
- Based on the payment pattern, the next ex-dividend date lands around 30 October 2026. That is an estimate from past timing, not a company announcement.
- How resilient is the SBRE.L dividend?
- Signals point to elevated dividend-cut risk, and it has not cleared the dividend-quality screen. See the full Quality, Risk and Trim breakdown on the SBRE.L scoring page. Informational only, not financial advice.
How the resilience scores are calculated (methodology)
The calculator is a what-if tool using assumptions you control. Projections are not predictions, not a guarantee of future returns, and not financial advice. Always do your own research. See the Terms of Service.