HomePersonal FinanceTaxes › Dividend Tax Guide

Dividend Tax Guide: How Qualified and Ordinary Dividends Are Taxed

Dividends are taxed in two ways depending on their classification. Qualified dividends receive preferential tax rates of 0%, 15%, or 20% — the same as long-term capital gains. Ordinary (non-qualified) dividends are taxed at your regular income tax rate, up to 37%. The distinction can mean a 17+ percentage point difference in your tax rate on the same income.

Qualified vs Ordinary Dividends

FeatureQualified DividendsOrdinary Dividends
Tax Rate0%, 15%, or 20%10% – 37% (your marginal bracket)
Holding PeriodMust hold stock 60+ days in 121-day windowNo holding requirement
Paid ByU.S. corporations, qualified foreign corpsREITs, MLPs, money market funds, special dividends
Reported On1099-DIV Box 1b1099-DIV Box 1a (total, includes qualified)
NIITSubject to 3.8% surtax if income > thresholdSubject to 3.8% surtax if income > threshold

Qualified Dividend Tax Rates (2025)

Filing Status0% Rate15% Rate20% Rate
SingleUp to $48,350$48,351 – $533,400Over $533,400
Married Filing JointlyUp to $96,700$96,701 – $600,050Over $600,050
Head of HouseholdUp to $64,750$64,751 – $566,700Over $566,700

These are the same brackets as long-term capital gains. Many middle-income retirees with modest taxable income can receive qualified dividends at 0% federal tax.

What Makes a Dividend “Qualified”?

Two conditions must be met:

1. The paying entity must qualify. Most U.S. corporations and certain foreign companies (those in countries with U.S. tax treaties or whose stock trades on a U.S. exchange) pay qualified dividends. REITs, master limited partnerships (MLPs), and money market funds typically do not.

2. You must meet the holding period. You must hold the stock for at least 61 days during the 121-day period that begins 60 days before the ex-dividend date. For preferred stock, the requirement is 91 days during a 181-day window. This prevents investors from buying stock just to capture the dividend at a preferential rate.

Common Dividend Sources and Their Tax Treatment

SourceTypically Qualified?Notes
Common Stocks (U.S.)YesIf holding period met
Stock ETFsMostly yesPass-through from underlying holdings
Equity Mutual FundsMostly yesFund reports qualified portion on 1099-DIV
REITsMostly noTaxed as ordinary income (but may get 20% QBI deduction)
Preferred StockUsually yesLonger holding period required (91 days)
Bond FundsNoInterest distributions are ordinary income
Money Market FundsNoInterest, not dividends
Foreign StocksMaybeDepends on tax treaty status
Analyst Tip
Hold dividend-paying REITs and bond funds in tax-advantaged accounts (IRA, 401(k)) where their ordinary-income distributions won’t be taxed currently. Keep qualified-dividend-paying stocks in your taxable account where they enjoy the preferential 0–20% rate. This asset location strategy can significantly reduce your annual tax bill.

The Net Investment Income Tax on Dividends

If your modified AGI exceeds $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly), both qualified and ordinary dividends are subject to an additional 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax. This pushes the maximum effective rate on qualified dividends to 23.8% and ordinary dividends to 40.8%.

Strategies to Minimize Dividend Taxes

Asset location. Keep tax-inefficient dividend payers (REITs, bond funds) in tax-sheltered accounts. Keep qualified-dividend stocks in taxable accounts.

Meet the holding period. Don’t sell dividend stocks too quickly. If you sell within the 61-day window, those dividends lose their qualified status and are taxed at ordinary rates.

Manage your taxable income. If you’re near the 0% qualified dividend threshold, consider increasing pre-tax retirement contributions to keep your taxable income below the cutoff. Retirees can manage Roth conversions and Social Security timing to stay in the 0% zone.

Harvest losses. Use tax-loss harvesting to offset dividend income with investment losses.

Watch Out: DRIP Tax Trap
Dividend reinvestment plans (DRIPs) don’t avoid taxes. Even though the dividends are automatically reinvested in more shares, they’re still taxable income in the year received. Many investors forget to track the cost basis of reinvested shares, leading to accidental double taxation when they eventually sell.

Key Takeaways

  • Qualified dividends are taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% — ordinary dividends at your marginal income tax rate (up to 37%).
  • To qualify, hold the stock 60+ days around the ex-dividend date, and the issuer must be a qualifying U.S. or foreign corporation.
  • REIT and bond fund dividends are generally taxed as ordinary income — hold these in tax-advantaged accounts.
  • The 3.8% NIIT applies to all dividends for high earners above the $200K/$250K threshold.
  • Reinvested dividends (DRIPs) are still taxable — track your cost basis carefully.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are dividends taxed if I reinvest them?

Yes. Whether you take dividends as cash or reinvest them through a DRIP, they are taxable income in the year received. Reinvesting doesn’t defer or avoid the tax. Each reinvested dividend purchase increases your cost basis in the stock, which reduces your eventual capital gain when you sell.

How do I know if my dividends are qualified?

Your broker reports this on Form 1099-DIV. Box 1a shows total ordinary dividends; Box 1b shows the qualified portion. The qualified amount is always a subset of (or equal to) the ordinary amount. Most major U.S. stock dividends are qualified if you meet the holding period.

Do I owe taxes on dividends in my IRA or 401(k)?

No — not while the money stays in the account. Dividends in a Traditional IRA or 401(k) are tax-deferred; you pay ordinary income tax on withdrawals. Dividends in a Roth IRA are permanently tax-free if you meet the withdrawal rules.

Why are REIT dividends taxed at higher rates?

REITs are required to distribute at least 90% of their taxable income, and these distributions generally don’t qualify for the preferential rate. However, under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, individuals may deduct up to 20% of REIT dividends through the Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction, effectively capping the rate at about 29.6% for top-bracket taxpayers.

Can I avoid dividend taxes by selling before the ex-dividend date?

Technically yes — if you sell before the ex-dividend date, you don’t receive the dividend and don’t owe tax on it. But the stock price typically drops by approximately the dividend amount on the ex-date, so you’d capture that value as a capital gain instead. There’s no free lunch — you’re just shifting the income type.