Yield on Cost (YOC): What It Is & Why Singapore Dividend Investors Track It
Yield on cost (YOC) is the annual dividend income divided by your original purchase price, expressed as a percentage. Unlike current yield which uses today’s price, YOC shows how much income you are earning relative to what you actually paid — a key metric for long-term dividend investors.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always consult a licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions.
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What Is Yield on Cost?
Yield on cost (YOC) is a personal investment metric that measures your annual dividend income as a percentage of your original purchase price — not the current market price.
Formula: YOC = Annual Dividend per Share ÷ Cost per Share × 100%
For example, if you bought a Singapore REIT at S$1.20 five years ago, and it now pays an annual DPU of S$0.084 (which has grown from S$0.060 at purchase), your yield on cost is 7% (S$0.084 ÷ S$1.20) — even though the current yield for a new buyer at today’s price of S$1.50 might be only 5.6% (S$0.084 ÷ S$1.50).
YOC is most meaningful for long-term dividend investors tracking the growing income yield on their original investment, rewarding patient, buy-and-hold strategies where dividends grow over time.
Yield on Cost vs Current Yield: What Is the Difference?
The distinction between YOC and current yield is critical for understanding your real returns:
| Metric | Formula | What It Measures |
|---|---|---|
| Yield on Cost (YOC) | Annual DPU ÷ Purchase Price | Your personal income yield relative to what you paid |
| Current Yield | Annual DPU ÷ Current Market Price | Yield a new buyer gets at today’s price |
Current yield is the relevant metric for new investors deciding whether to buy. YOC is the relevant metric for existing investors tracking the performance of their holdings over time. Neither is “better” — they serve different analytical purposes.
YOC and Dividend Growth: The Compounding Power
YOC grows automatically when the company or REIT increases its distributions over time — without you needing to buy more units. This is the compounding power of dividend growth investing.
A simplified example with a Singapore REIT:
- You buy 10,000 units at S$1.00 each (cost: S$10,000)
- Year 1 DPU: S$0.055 → YOC: 5.5%, income: S$550
- Year 5 DPU: S$0.070 → YOC: 7.0%, income: S$700
- Year 10 DPU: S$0.090 → YOC: 9.0%, income: S$900
By Year 10, you are earning S$900/year on your original S$10,000 investment — a 9% YOC — even if the market price of the REIT has fluctuated. The original purchase is working harder over time.
This is why long-term investors in Singapore blue chips (DBS, OCBC) and high-quality S-REITs often have YOC figures well above current market yields — they bought at lower prices years ago and held as dividends grew.
YOC in Practice: Singapore REITs and Stocks
Here are illustrative YOC scenarios for Singapore investors (figures approximate, for educational purposes as at Q1 2026):
| Investment | Entry Price (5yr ago) | Current DPS/DPU | YOC | Current Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DBS Group | S$22.00 | S$2.16/yr | ~9.8% | ~6.0% (at S$36) |
| Parkway Life REIT | S$3.20 | S$0.153/yr | ~4.8% | ~3.8% (at S$4.05) |
These are illustrative examples. Your actual YOC depends on when you bought and at what price. Use the Dividend Portfolio Yield Calculator to track your personalised YOC across your portfolio.