ET Dividend Calendar
ET Dividend Calendar
ET
Last Dividend
$0.3325
Nov 9, 2025
Next Dividend
$0.3349
Feb 6, 2026
Annual Dividend
N/A
2024 estimate
Frequency
Quarterly
Upcoming ET Dividends
Upcoming Dividends
ET
ET
$0.3349
Quarterly
Ex-Date: Feb 6, 2026
Friday
Predicted
ET
ET
$0.3355
Quarterly
Ex-Date: Feb 7, 2026
Saturday
Predicted
ET
ET
$0.3349
Quarterly
Ex-Date: Feb 7, 2026
Saturday
Predicted
ET
ET
$0.3350
Quarterly
Ex-Date: Feb 10, 2026
Tuesday
Predicted
ET
ET
$0.3374
Quarterly
Ex-Date: May 8, 2026
Friday
Predicted
ET
ET
$0.3380
Quarterly
Ex-Date: May 9, 2026
Saturday
Predicted
ET
ET
$0.3374
Quarterly
Ex-Date: May 10, 2026
Sunday
Predicted
ET
ET
$0.3375
Quarterly
Ex-Date: May 14, 2026
Thursday
Predicted
Recent ET Dividend History
About ET Dividends
This page tracks all ET dividend payments including ex-dividend dates and dividend amounts. Use this information to plan your dividend investing strategy and track dividend income.
Dividend Profile
Company: ET
Payment Type: Quarterly Dividends
Yield Category: Growth/Income
Dividend Yield Info
Ex-Dividend Date: Last day to buy ET stock to receive the upcoming dividend payment.
Record Date: Date when shareholders must own stock to receive dividend (typically 1 business day after ex-date).
Payment Date: When dividend cash is deposited to your account (usually 2-3 weeks after ex-date).
Investment Strategy
Buy Before: Purchase shares before the ex-dividend date to qualify for payment.
Hold Period: No minimum holding period after ex-date, but consider tax implications.
Reinvestment: Consider DRIP (dividend reinvestment plan) for compound growth.
Dividend History Insights
ET dividend predictions are based on historical payment patterns and official company dividend policies. Actual dividend announcements may vary based on company performance, earnings, and board decisions.
Tax Considerations
• Qualified dividends taxed at capital gains rates
• Hold shares for 60+ days around ex-date for qualified treatment
• Consider dividend timing for tax optimization
• REIT/MLP dividends may have different tax treatment