If you're building an income portfolio, spreadsheets stop working pretty quickly. You need something that tracks ex-dates, calculates yield on cost, projects future income, and ideally connects to your actual brokerage so you're not manually entering every trade.
We tested seven dividend tracking apps available on iOS in 2026. Here's how they compare — with honest assessments of what each does well and where it falls short.
How we evaluated
We looked at five criteria for each app:
- Brokerage integration — Does it pull your real holdings, or do you enter them manually?
- Dividend data quality — Are yields, ex-dates, and payment schedules accurate and up to date?
- Income projections — Can you see estimated future income by month or year?
- Additional analytics — Health scores, Monte Carlo, valuation metrics, or other tools beyond basic tracking.
- Pricing — What does it cost, and is the free tier useful?
1. Infnits
Best for: Investors who want portfolio analytics and dividend tracking in one app.
Infnits connects directly to your brokerage through Plaid and pulls your real holdings, cost basis, and transaction history. Dividend tracking is one part of a broader analytics suite that includes portfolio health scores, investor archetype classification, Monte Carlo simulations, and AI-generated insights.
The dividend view shows current yield, yield on cost, annual income per position, and a payment calendar. Because it uses your actual cost basis from the brokerage connection, yield on cost is always accurate without manual entry.
Beyond dividends, Infnits offers features that most pure dividend trackers don't: a composite health score that evaluates diversification, income stability, and valuation across your entire portfolio, plus Monte Carlo projections that stress-test your plan against thousands of market scenarios.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Brokerage sync | Yes (Plaid — supports most major US brokerages) |
| Dividend calendar | Monthly view with upcoming ex-dates and payments |
| Yield on cost | Automatic from brokerage cost basis |
| Additional tools | Health scores, Monte Carlo, AI insights, archetype analysis |
| Pricing | Free |
| Platform | iOS, Android |
Limitations: Infnits is newer to the market than some competitors, so its stock screener and community features are less developed. It's focused on portfolio analysis rather than discovery.
2. Stock Events
Best for: Dividend calendar tracking with a clean, visual interface.
Stock Events is one of the most popular dividend tracking apps on iOS, and for good reason. The calendar view is excellent — you see exactly when each dividend payment hits, color-coded by stock. The UI is polished and intuitive, making it easy to get a quick snapshot of upcoming income.
The app supports manual portfolio entry and has added brokerage sync in recent updates. Dividend data coverage is strong across US and international markets. The free tier is usable, though many features require the premium subscription.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Brokerage sync | Yes (added recently, coverage expanding) |
| Dividend calendar | Excellent — visual, color-coded, detailed |
| Yield on cost | Yes (manual entry or brokerage sync) |
| Additional tools | Dividend history, payout ratio, growth streaks |
| Pricing | Free tier + Premium (~$5.99/mo or $35.99/yr) |
| Platform | iOS, Android, Web |
Limitations: Stock Events is primarily a dividend tracker. It doesn't offer portfolio-level analytics like health scores, risk assessment, or Monte Carlo simulations. If you want deeper analysis beyond dividends, you'll need a second app.
3. Dividend Tracker by Simply Wall St
Best for: Visual learners who want infographic-style analysis of their holdings.
Simply Wall St made its name with its distinctive "snowflake" visualization that scores stocks across value, growth, health, dividends, and future performance. The dividend tracking features are solid — you get yield information, payout ratios, and dividend history for each holding.
The portfolio tracker connects to brokerages or accepts manual input. Where it stands out is in the visual presentation of fundamental data. Complex metrics are rendered as intuitive charts and graphics that make analysis accessible even for beginners.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Brokerage sync | Yes (limited brokerages) |
| Dividend calendar | Basic — shows upcoming dividends |
| Yield on cost | Yes |
| Additional tools | Snowflake analysis, valuation models, stock screening |
| Pricing | Free tier (limited) + Premium (~$10/mo) |
| Platform | iOS, Android, Web |
Limitations: The free tier is quite restrictive. Dividend-specific features are secondary to the broader stock analysis platform, so if your primary need is income tracking, you're paying for a lot of features you may not use.
4. Seeking Alpha
Best for: Research-heavy investors who combine dividend tracking with deep fundamental analysis and community insights.
Seeking Alpha is best known as a financial research platform with thousands of analyst articles and community posts. The portfolio tracker includes dividend data — yield, ex-dates, payment history — alongside the deep fundamental analysis the platform is known for.
The dividend grades system (A+ through F) is particularly useful for income investors. It evaluates dividend safety, growth, yield, and consistency, giving you a quick read on whether a dividend is sustainable. The community aspect also adds value — you can find detailed analysis of almost any dividend stock from multiple perspectives.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Brokerage sync | Yes |
| Dividend calendar | Yes — integrated with portfolio |
| Yield on cost | Yes |
| Additional tools | Quant ratings, dividend grades, analyst articles, community research |
| Pricing | Free tier + Premium ($19.99/mo) + Alpha Picks ($33.25/mo) |
| Platform | iOS, Android, Web |
Limitations: Seeking Alpha is a research platform first and a tracker second. The mobile app can feel cluttered with content. Premium pricing is steep if you only want dividend tracking. The best features are behind the paywall.
5. M1 Finance
Best for: Investors who want dividend tracking built into their actual brokerage.
M1 Finance is a brokerage, not just a tracker — which means your dividend data is always perfectly in sync because it's the source. The platform shows dividend history, projected income, and reinvestment activity (DRIP) natively. The "pie" portfolio visualization makes it easy to see your allocation at a glance.
If you're willing to move your holdings to M1, the tracking problem goes away entirely. Dividends are tracked automatically, reinvestment is handled seamlessly, and projected income is based on your exact positions.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Brokerage sync | Native (it is the brokerage) |
| Dividend calendar | Built into activity feed and projections |
| Yield on cost | Yes (native cost basis tracking) |
| Additional tools | Pie allocation, auto-rebalance, DRIP, borrowing |
| Pricing | Free + M1 Plus ($3.95/mo) |
| Platform | iOS, Android, Web |
Limitations: You have to use M1 as your brokerage to get the tracking benefits — it doesn't connect to external accounts. If your holdings are at Fidelity, Schwab, or another brokerage, M1's tracking features aren't available to you unless you transfer. The analytics beyond basic allocation and income are limited.
6. Sharesight
Best for: International investors and anyone who needs precise tax reporting alongside dividend tracking.
Sharesight is a portfolio tracker with particularly strong dividend and tax reporting features. It tracks dividends automatically, calculates franking credits (important for Australian investors), and generates tax reports that map directly to what you need at filing time. It supports markets in the US, Australia, UK, Canada, and New Zealand.
The dividend tracking is thorough — you get income reports, yield calculations, and contribution analysis that shows how much of your total return came from dividends vs. capital gains. The reporting features are among the best available for individual investors.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Brokerage sync | Yes (file import + some direct connections) |
| Dividend calendar | Yes — with income reports and projections |
| Yield on cost | Yes |
| Additional tools | Tax reports, multi-currency, performance attribution, benchmarking |
| Pricing | Free (up to 10 holdings) + Investor ($12/mo) + Expert ($19/mo) |
| Platform | iOS, Android, Web |
Limitations: The mobile app is functional but feels secondary to the web experience. The free tier is limited to 10 holdings, which most dividend investors will outgrow quickly. Pricing gets expensive at the Expert tier. The UI, while functional, isn't as polished as newer apps.
7. DivTracker
Best for: Simple, focused dividend tracking without extra complexity.
DivTracker does one thing and does it well: track your dividend income. The interface is straightforward — add your holdings, and the app calculates your yield, annual income, and shows a clear calendar of upcoming payments. There's no brokerage sync, which means manual entry, but the simplicity is the point.
For investors who want a clean, distraction-free view of their dividend income without the overhead of a full portfolio analytics platform, DivTracker is a solid choice. The learning curve is essentially zero.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Brokerage sync | No (manual entry) |
| Dividend calendar | Yes — clean and simple |
| Yield on cost | Yes (from manual cost basis) |
| Additional tools | Minimal — focused on dividend tracking only |
| Pricing | Free + Pro (one-time purchase ~$4.99) |
| Platform | iOS |
Limitations: No brokerage sync means manual data entry for every position. No portfolio analytics, risk assessment, or projection tools. Limited to iOS. If you have a large portfolio, keeping it updated manually becomes tedious.
The bottom line
The best dividend tracker for you depends on what else you want from the app:
- If you want portfolio analytics + dividend tracking in one free app, start with Infnits.
- If you want the best pure dividend calendar, Stock Events is hard to beat.
- If you want deep research and community analysis, Seeking Alpha delivers the most depth.
- If you want tracking built into your brokerage, consider M1 Finance.
- If you need tax reporting and international support, Sharesight is the strongest option.
- If you want visual fundamental analysis, Simply Wall St stands out.
- If you want dead-simple tracking with no bloat, DivTracker keeps it minimal.
Most of these apps offer free tiers, so the best approach is to try two or three and see which workflow fits how you actually manage your portfolio.