QQQ Dividend Calculator
Invesco QQQ Trust (Nasdaq-100) — project dividend income, portfolio value, and yield-on-cost with dividends reinvested (DRIP).
Enter what you would invest and how long you would hold. This compounds QQQ's current yield and an illustrative dividend-per-share growth forward, reinvesting each distribution, and reports the result as a range — not a single number — because forward growth is an assumption you can change, not a prediction. QQQ is a growth-tilted index with a very small dividend, so the portfolio-value line does most of the work here and the income line stays low.
Year-by-year breakdown ›
| Year | Contributed | Value (median) | Div income | Yield on cost |
|---|
Median path shown; every figure also carries a p5–p95 band on the chart above. Contributions are your money in; value and income are illustrative projections.
Assumptions & sources ›
| Assumption | Value | Source · asOf |
|---|---|---|
| Distribution yield | ~0.5% | Invesco QQQ fund page · asOf 2026-06 |
| Dividend-per-share growth | ~10%/yr | Illustrative — elevated off a very low base · asOf 2026-06 |
| Expense ratio | 0.20% | Invesco QQQ fund page · asOf 2026-06 |
| Forward price growth | 8%/yr | Illustrative editorial assumption — you can change it |
| Scenario band | p5 / median / p95 | Illustrative low/base/high scenario, not a probabilistic forecast |
Illustrative model, not investment advice. The starting yield and expense ratio are the fund's asOf 2026-06 figures; forward price and dividend growth are assumptions you can change, not predictions. QQQ's dividend-per-share has grown quickly, but off a tiny base, so a high growth rate still leaves the income line small — the higher forward price-growth assumption (8%) reflects the fund's growth tilt and, with it, wider swings than a broad-market index. The engine runs three deterministic paths (low, base, high) and reports the base as the median with the low and high as the p5 and p95, so the band brackets the outcome rather than promising one. Dividend growth is applied to the per-share distribution; the expense ratio is dragged off price growth. Figures refresh on our quarterly cadence.
What QQQ actually is
QQQ is the Invesco QQQ Trust, and it tracks the Nasdaq-100 Index — the 100 largest non-financial companies listed on the Nasdaq, weighted by market capitalisation. In practice that is a concentrated bet on mega-cap technology: a handful of names at the top of the index carry an outsized share of the weight, and the fund holds no financials by construction. The dividend is almost an afterthought. Most of the underlying companies retain earnings to reinvest in growth rather than pay them out, so QQQ's distribution yield sits near ~0.5% — a fraction of what a dividend-focused fund like SCHD or a covered-call fund like JEPQ pays. If you came to this calculator expecting an income stream, the income line above is deliberately flat: QQQ is held for the price growth the chart's shaded band tries to capture, not for the check.
Who tends to reach for it
QQQ shows up in growth-oriented portfolios and long-horizon accumulation plans, not income buckets. The typical holder is decades from needing the money and is willing to accept larger drawdowns in exchange for the historical growth of the Nasdaq-100 — a trade the fund's concentration cuts both ways on. That same concentration means QQQ is not a diversified core the way a total-market fund is; when a few large technology names fall, the fund falls with them, which is why the price band widens rather than narrows as the horizon grows. This calculator does not judge that trade-off. It simply compounds the assumptions you set so you can see the shape of a growth-tilted, near-zero-yield holding next to the income-first funds elsewhere in this cluster. If your question is "how much can this pay me?", QQQ answers it with a small number; if your question is "how much might this grow?", it belongs in the conversation.
How DRIP compounds here
With dividends reinvested, each small distribution buys a few more shares, and those shares pay their own dividend next period. On QQQ the effect is muted: because the starting yield is so low, reinvested dividends add only a sliver to the share count, and almost all of the compounding you see in the value line comes from price growth, not from the dividend loop. Yield-on-cost — dividends received in a year divided by what you first put in — stays low for QQQ even over a long hold, because it is climbing from a tiny base. That is the honest contrast with a fund like SCHD, where a higher starting yield and reinvestment do most of the lifting. Turn DRIP off here and the income line barely changes, which tells you most of QQQ's story is capital appreciation, not a growing payout. The chart shows the outcome as a band, not a line, because the rate of price growth is uncertain.
The tax detail worth knowing
QQQ's distributions are generally qualified dividends, taxed at long-term capital-gains rates in a taxable brokerage account — but the yield is so small that dividend tax is rarely the main event for a QQQ holder. The larger tax consideration is the capital gain you realise when you eventually sell: a fund held for years of price growth can carry a substantial embedded gain, and selling in a taxable account triggers tax on that appreciation. Held inside a Roth or traditional IRA, both the reinvested dividends and the eventual sale compound without that annual or terminal bill. This calculator projects gross dividends and does not subtract any tax, so a taxable-account result is an upper bound on what you keep. For how qualified versus ordinary treatment changes a dividend number, see the guide linked below.
Compare & go deeper
- JEPQ dividend calculator
The income-first take on the same Nasdaq-100 — covered-call yield vs QQQ's price growth.
- VOO dividend calculator
The broad S&P 500 baseline — less concentrated than QQQ, still low-yield.
- VTI dividend calculator
Total US market — the diversified counterpoint to QQQ's tech tilt.
- SCHD dividend calculator
The dividend-growth alternative: higher yield, DRIP does more of the work.
- Dividend snowball
After-tax DRIP with real IRS brackets and a dividend-cut stress overlay.
- Live off dividends
The portfolio size needed to actually live on the payout.
- Qualified vs ordinary dividends
How dividend tax treatment changes what you keep.
- All ticker dividend calculators
The full set across income, dividend-growth, and broad funds.