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TW.L dividend calculator

Taylor Wimpey plc

Current price £0.83

Dividend income calculator

Adjust the numbers to see how the income grows.

The snowball effect: reinvesting vs taking the cash

Reinvesting dividendsTaking dividends as cash
£115£230£345£460Year 0Year 5Year 10

TW.L dividend health check

See the full 10-year picture on Inspect

How resilient is the TW.L dividend?

Signals point to elevated dividend-cut risk, and it has not cleared the dividend-quality screen.

The payout ratio sits at 329% of earnings. The dividend has grown about 13.0% 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 TW.L resilience breakdown

We 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 proof

TW.L vs similar payers

ShareYield5y dividend growth
TW.LTaylor Wimpey plc9.20%13.0%This page
PEPPepsiCo, Inc.4.24%6.8%Calculate →
ULVR.LUnilever PLC3.83%0.2%Calculate →
LGEN.LLegal & General Group Plc7.36%4.4%Calculate →

Frequently asked questions

How much does TW.L pay per share?
At the current rate, Taylor Wimpey plc pays about £0.08 per share over a year, paid twice a year.
When is the next TW.L dividend?
Based on the payment pattern, the next ex-dividend date lands around 9 October 2026. That is an estimate from past timing, not a company announcement.
How resilient is the TW.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 TW.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.