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Results are illustrative only and are not financial advice. Dividend data is sourced from public filings. Past dividends do not guarantee future payments. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.

Results

Total Dividend Income

$1,584.12

From $1,000 invested

Number of Payments

36

22.53 shares

Yield on Cost

16.62%

as of 2025

Investment Period

18 years

Oct 1, 2007 – Apr 27, 2026

Annual Dividend Breakdown

Latest: $114.29(cash dividends, no DRIP)

Dividend payment history for $1,000 invested in ASML (ASMLF) from 2007 to 2026

Total received is cash income for your entered investment amount (no DRIP).

  • May 5, 2026$71.35
  • Feb 18, 2026$42.94
  • Nov 6, 2025$42.04
  • Aug 6, 2025$41.57
  • May 6, 2025$47.20
  • Feb 19, 2025$35.41
  • Nov 7, 2024$37.03
  • Aug 7, 2024$37.06
  • May 7, 2024$42.31
  • Feb 14, 2024$35.26
  • Nov 10, 2023$34.56
  • Aug 10, 2023$35.93
  • May 10, 2023$41.99
  • Feb 15, 2023$33.32
  • Nov 14, 2022$30.30
  • Aug 12, 2022$31.40
  • May 12, 2022$87.59
  • Nov 12, 2021$47.08
  • May 12, 2021$41.97
  • Nov 13, 2020$31.47
  • May 6, 2020$32.78
  • Nov 15, 2019$26.40
  • May 8, 2019$52.67
  • May 9, 2018$38.17
  • May 12, 2017$29.40
  • May 17, 2016$27.28
  • May 11, 2015$17.08
  • May 13, 2014$19.02
  • May 14, 2013$11.94
  • Dec 3, 2012$348.20
  • May 15, 2012$10.36
  • May 10, 2011$7.66
  • Apr 13, 2010$3.83
  • Apr 15, 2009$4.51
  • May 14, 2008$11.49
  • Oct 4, 2007$95.57

About the ASMLF dividend calculator

The ASML (ASMLF) dividend income calculator reconstructs what an actual cash investment would have paid out in dividends. At the split-adjusted closing price of $44.39 on Oct 1, 2007, an investment of $1,000 bought 22.53 shares — the cost basis every payout below is measured against, through Apr 27, 2026.

Across that span those shares have paid $1,584.12 in dividends — about 1.6× the $1,000 invested. Measured against the entry price, yield on cost moved from 1.15% in its first full year (2008) to 16.62% by 2025, reflecting a dividend that has grown far faster than the price originally paid.

These numbers assume every dividend was taken as cash. Reinvesting instead — the DRIP toggle above — would buy additional shares at each ex-date price, compounding the share count and lifting every subsequent payment.

Frequently asked questions

Data & methodology