Broadcom Inc. — DRIP Calculator
Broadcom Inc. (AVGO) DRIP Calculator — 2021 to 2026
This free AVGO DRIP Calculator uses 20 actual historical dividend payments from 2021-06-21 to 2026-03-23 — not an assumed yield or average rate. Every number in the simulation comes directly from AVGO's real ex-dividend dates and the actual stock price on each of those dates. The period slider's maximum is exactly 59 months, matching what exists in the database. When new dividends are added by our sync process, the slider automatically extends — no manual updates needed.
What is a DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Plan)?
A Dividend Reinvestment Plan — DRIP — is a program that automatically uses every dividend payment you receive from Broadcom Inc. to purchase additional shares of AVGO instead of depositing cash into your account. Most major US brokers including Fidelity, Charles Schwab, Interactive Brokers, and Robinhood offer free DRIP enrollment for eligible dividend-paying stocks.
The core mechanic is simple but powerful: if you hold 200 AVGO shares and the company pays a $0.30 per-share dividend, you receive $60. Without DRIP, that $60 sits as cash. With DRIP, it buys roughly 0.14 additional AVGO shares at the current price of $420.17. Those new shares participate in the next dividend, producing slightly more income than before — and so on, every quarter. This is the compounding effect that makes DRIP meaningfully outperform simple buy-and-hold over multi-year periods.
How the AVGO DRIP Calculator works — step by step
Step 1 — Set your initial investment: Use the slider or input field to enter how much you would have invested in AVGO at the start of the selected period. The calculator uses the actual AVGO stock price on the first available dividend date in the window to determine how many shares you would have purchased.
Step 2 — Choose the period: The period slider runs from 1 month up to 59 months — the exact span for which we have AVGO dividend data (2021-06-21 to 2026-03-23). You cannot select a longer window than what the data supports. Shorter windows let you study specific market cycles.
Step 3 — Toggle DRIP on or off: Switching the toggle changes which scenario is highlighted. DRIP ON shows the result of reinvesting every dividend payment. DRIP OFF shows what would have happened keeping dividends as cash, with share count fixed. Both values are always visible side by side for comparison.
Step 4 — Read the results: The "With DRIP" card shows your final portfolio value after reinvestment compounding. "Without DRIP" shows the same initial investment grown only through price appreciation plus accumulated cash dividends. The portfolio growth chart plots both paths over time so you can see exactly when and how quickly the DRIP advantage compounds.
The exact calculation formula used
For each of the 20 historical AVGO dividend payments, the calculator executes:
New Shares Purchased = (Dividend Per Share × Current Share Count) ÷ AVGO Price on Ex-Date
These new shares are added to the running total before the next dividend is processed, so each subsequent payment is earned on a slightly larger base. The no-DRIP scenario keeps the share count fixed at the initial purchase and sums cash dividends separately. Both scenarios are valued at the most recent AVGO closing price ($420.17) to compute the final portfolio worth. Because we use actual prices on each ex-date — not a constant assumed yield — the result reflects what would genuinely have occurred.
AVGO dividend history — year by year
Broadcom Inc. has a recorded dividend payment history going back to 2021. In 2026, total dividends per share amounted to $0.6500. At the current stock price of $420.17, that represents a trailing dividend yield of approximately 0.63%.
Comparing the most recent full year (2026: $0.6500/share) to two years prior (2024: $2.1700/share), AVGO's annual dividend per share has declined by 70.0% over that period. Dividend growth is a key factor in DRIP performance — faster-growing dividends accelerate the share accumulation curve more quickly than a flat or declining dividend.
Why DRIP outperforms cash dividends over time — the compounding math
The DRIP advantage is not dramatic in year one. The difference begins small and widens slowly, then accelerates. Consider a simplified example using AVGO at a constant $420 per share with a 0.63% annual yield:
In year one, a $10,000 investment (23.80 shares) generates roughly $63.00 in dividends. With DRIP, those dividends buy 0.150 additional shares. In year two, dividends are now earned on a fractionally larger base. By year five, the share count is meaningfully higher than the initial purchase — and the gap accelerates in each subsequent year because reinvestment compounds on itself. This is why DRIP investors in long-held positions often find their share count 20–40% higher than their original purchase after a decade, depending purely on the dividend yield and price stability.
US tax treatment of DRIP dividends
A critical aspect of DRIP investing that the calculator does not account for is taxes. In the United States, reinvested dividends from AVGO are taxable in the year they are received — even though no cash is distributed to you. If AVGO's dividends qualify as "qualified dividends" (most US equity dividends do), they are taxed at the lower long-term capital gains rate (0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your income bracket) rather than as ordinary income. Non-qualified dividends are taxed as ordinary income at your marginal rate.
Each DRIP purchase also creates a new cost basis lot at the reinvestment price. Over many years and dozens of dividend payments, this results in a large number of small lots at different prices — which can complicate tax-loss harvesting and capital gains calculations when you eventually sell. Many investors hold DRIP positions in tax-advantaged accounts (IRA, Roth IRA, 401k) specifically to avoid this complexity and let compounding run without annual tax drag.
DRIP vs lump-sum reinvestment — what's the difference?
True DRIP reinvestment (as modeled here) reinvests dividends immediately at the ex-dividend date price. An alternative is to accumulate cash dividends and make periodic lump-sum purchases of AVGO shares — for example, once a quarter or once a year. The mathematical difference is usually small if AVGO's price trends upward over time (earlier reinvestment at lower prices is better). However, in a declining market, delaying reinvestment can actually improve results by allowing you to buy more shares at lower prices. This calculator models immediate reinvestment at each ex-date, which is how most brokerage DRIP programs operate in practice.
Limitations and assumptions of this calculator
This calculator makes several simplifying assumptions you should be aware of: (1) No transaction costs — most DRIP programs are commission-free, but some brokers charge small fees per reinvestment. (2) No taxes — dividend tax is not deducted before reinvestment, so the DRIP value shown represents a pre-tax, gross reinvestment scenario. (3) Fractional shares — the calculator allows fractional shares for precision; not all brokers support fractional DRIP. (4) Price on ex-date — reinvestment uses the actual AVGO price on the ex-dividend date from our database, which may differ slightly from the exact intraday price used by your broker. (5) Historical only — past dividends are not a guarantee of future dividends. Broadcom Inc. could cut, suspend, or increase its dividend at any time based on business conditions.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This DRIP calculator is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, or tax advice. Past dividend payments and stock prices are not a guarantee of future performance. Actual results will vary based on brokerage terms, tax obligations, dividend changes, and market conditions. Always consult a qualified financial advisor and tax professional before making investment decisions.