Payment Date

Payment Date

A payment date, also known as the pay or payable date, is the day on which a declared stock dividend is scheduled to be paid to eligible investors. The day before the record date is the ex-dividend date or ex-date, meaning it’s the first day the stock is trading ex-dividend. The ex-date or ex-dividend date is the trading date on (and after) which the dividend is not owed to a new buyer of the stock. Only those shareholders who bought the stock before the ex-dividend date will receive the dividend on the date of payment. A payment date, also known as the pay or payable date, is the day on which a declared stock dividend is scheduled to be paid to eligible investors.

The payment date is the actual day when a company pays its eligible shareholders dividends.

What Is a Payment Date?

A payment date, also known as the pay or payable date, is the day on which a declared stock dividend is scheduled to be paid to eligible investors. This date can be up to a month after the ex-dividend date. Note that the stock price may fall on the payment date to reflect the dividend payment even if it has not been actually credited to investors at that point in time.

The payment date is the actual day when a company pays its eligible shareholders dividends.
The payment date will often be a few weeks after the ex-dividend date has occurred.
Investors and analysts may watch the stock price on the payment date to see if the cash disbursal has a negative impact on the company's perceived financial stability.

Understanding Payment Dates

The payment date for a stock's dividend is the day on which the actual checks go out — or electronic payments are made — to eligible shareholders. Shareholders owning the stock on the record date will receive the dividend on the payment date. The day before the record date is the ex-dividend date or ex-date, meaning it’s the first day the stock is trading ex-dividend.

The pay date for the dividend may be up to one month after the ex-dividend date passes. When the payment date arrives, the company will usually issue the payment to the broker serving the stockholder instead of the shareholder directly. The dividend will then be transferred to the respective shareholder's account or reinvested if designated as such.

There can be changes in a company’s stock price on the payment date for dividends, which investors may look to as an indicator of how the market values the security. Other investors, who did not qualify for the dividend, might buy or sell shares as the payment date approaches. This could lead to the share price remaining elevated despite the issuance of a dividend.

Special Considerations 

The potential exists for stock prices to decline because the value of a company is decreased based on the full sum of the dividends since the payment is drawn from profits and reserves.

There are some expectations for share prices to decrease in equal amounts to the dividend to show this reduction in value. However, this may not always be the case as other factors can come into play that influence the stock price to a greater extent than a dividend payment. If a company sees its share price remain the same or increase on or after a payment date, it can indicate that there is higher market demand for the stock.

Dividend Payment and Relevant Dates

Only those shareholders who bought the stock before the ex-dividend date will receive the dividend on the date of payment. The process and cycle of dividend payments typically follow a set pattern. The company’s board of directors will make an announcement declaring the parameters of the next dividend payment to be issued. This is known as the announcement date or declaration date for the dividend.

When the declaration is made, the company will determine a record date, also known as the date of record, which indicates the deadline for a shareholder to be recorded on the books in order to qualify for the dividend. Usually, this also coincides with who the company issues such material as financial reports and proxy statements.

This step usually includes the company setting the ex-dividend date, which is determined by the rules of the respective stock exchange it is listed on. New shareholders who first purchase stock on the ex-dividend date or after do not qualify for that next dividend payment to be issued. The ex-dividend date, in many cases, is set one business day prior to the date of record.

Dividend Timeline

Dividend Timeline.

Image by Julie Bang © Investopedia 2019

To summarize the four major dates in the process of a dividend distribution:

Related terms:

Cum Dividend

Cum dividend is when a buyer of a security will receive a dividend that a company has declared but has not yet paid. read more

Declaration Date

The declaration date is the date on which a company announces the next dividend payment and the last date an option holder can exercise their option. read more

Dividend

A dividend is the distribution of some of a company's earnings to a class of its shareholders, as determined by the company's board of directors. read more

Ex-Dividend Date

The ex-date, or ex-dividend date, is the date on or after which a security is traded without a previously declared dividend or distribution. read more

Ex-Distribution

An ex-distribution is an investment that is sold without the rights to a specific payment. The rights belong to the previous owner. read more

Ex-Dividend : Examples & Key Dates

Ex-dividend is a classification in stock trading that indicates when a declared dividend belongs to the seller rather than the buyer. read more

Record Date

The record date is the last date in which shareholders are eligible to receive a dividend or distribution. It is established by the company's board. read more

Reinvestment

Reinvestment is using dividends, interest, and any other form of distribution earned in an investment to purchase additional shares or units. read more

Spillover Dividend and Example

A spillover dividend is one in which the year that the shareholder receives payment and the year that the payment is taxable are different. read more

Stock Dividend

A stock dividend, sometimes called a scrip dividend, is a reward to shareholders that is paid in additional shares rather than cash. read more