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Dividend Calculator for Corteva (CTVA)

Calculate how much dividend income you would have earned from Corteva (CTVA) over any historical period.

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

$145.55

From $1,000 invested

Number of Payments

28

34.33 shares

Yield on Cost

2.40%

as of 2025

Investment Period

6 years

Jul 30, 2019 – Jun 1, 2026

Annual Dividend Breakdown

Latest: $12.36(cash dividends, no DRIP)

Dividend payment history for $1,000 invested in Corteva (CTVA) from 2019 to 2026

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

  • Jun 15, 2026$6.18
  • Mar 16, 2026$6.18
  • Dec 15, 2025$6.18
  • Sep 15, 2025$6.18
  • Jun 16, 2025$5.84
  • Mar 17, 2025$5.84
  • Dec 16, 2024$5.84
  • Sep 17, 2024$5.84
  • Jun 18, 2024$5.49
  • Mar 15, 2024$5.49
  • Dec 15, 2023$5.49
  • Sep 15, 2023$5.49
  • Jun 15, 2023$5.15
  • Mar 15, 2023$5.15
  • Dec 15, 2022$5.15
  • Sep 15, 2022$5.15
  • Jun 15, 2022$4.81
  • Mar 15, 2022$4.81
  • Dec 15, 2021$4.81
  • Sep 15, 2021$4.81
  • Jun 15, 2021$4.46
  • Mar 15, 2021$4.46
  • Dec 15, 2020$4.46
  • Sep 15, 2020$4.46
  • Jun 15, 2020$4.46
  • Mar 13, 2020$4.46
  • Dec 18, 2019$4.46
  • Sep 13, 2019$4.46

About the CTVA dividend calculator

The Corteva (CTVA) dividend income calculator reconstructs what an actual cash investment would have paid out in dividends. At the split-adjusted closing price of $29.13 on Jul 30, 2019, an investment of $1,000 bought 34.33 shares — the cost basis every payout below is measured against, through Jun 1, 2026.

Across that span those shares have paid $145.55 in dividends — about 14.56% of the $1,000 invested. Measured against the entry price, yield on cost moved from 1.79% in its first full year (2020) to 2.4% by 2025, reflecting a dividend that has outpaced the original cost basis.

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