Stock Valuation

Dividend Discount Model (DDM) Calculator

Calculate the fair value of any dividend stock using the Gordon Growth Model. Find out if a stock is overvalued or undervalued in minutes.

12 min read-Updated February 2026

The Gordon Growth Model Formula

The simplest and most widely used dividend discount model

Intrinsic Value = D1 / (r - g)

D1

Expected dividend next year

(Current dividend x (1 + growth rate))

r (Required Return)

Your minimum acceptable return

(Typically 8-12% for stocks)

g (Growth Rate)

Expected dividend growth rate

(Must be less than r)

Quick Example: Coca-Cola (KO)

  • - Current annual dividend: $1.94
  • - Expected growth rate (g): 4%
  • - D1 = $1.94 x 1.04 = $2.02
  • - Required return (r): 10%
  • - Intrinsic Value = $2.02 / (0.10 - 0.04) = $33.67
  • - Current price: ~$62 -- appears overvalued by this model

Note: This simplified result highlights why the DDM works best when combined with other valuation methods. A 10% required return may be too high for a defensive blue-chip like KO.

Worked Examples: Valuing Real Stocks

Example 1: Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) -- Fair Value

Inputs

  • Current dividend: $4.76/share
  • Growth rate (g): 5.5%
  • Required return (r): 9%

Calculation

  • D1 = $4.76 x 1.055 = $5.02
  • Value = $5.02 / (0.09 - 0.055)
  • Intrinsic Value = $143.43
  • Current price: ~$160

At a 9% required return, the DDM suggests JNJ is slightly overvalued. However, lowering the required return to 8% (reasonable for a low-risk Dividend King) gives a value of $200.80, making it look undervalued. This sensitivity is a key consideration.

Example 2: AbbVie (ABBV) -- Growth Premium

Inputs

  • Current dividend: $6.20/share
  • Growth rate (g): 7.5%
  • Required return (r): 10%

Calculation

  • D1 = $6.20 x 1.075 = $6.67
  • Value = $6.67 / (0.10 - 0.075)
  • Intrinsic Value = $266.60
  • Current price: ~$185

AbbVie's high dividend growth rate (10.5% over 10 years) combined with a large current dividend gives a high intrinsic value. The DDM suggests ABBV is undervalued, which aligns with its reputation as a top dividend growth stock.

Multi-Stage DDM: For More Accuracy

When One Growth Rate Is Not Enough

The basic Gordon Growth Model assumes dividends grow at a constant rate forever. In reality, many companies grow dividends faster when young and slower as they mature. The two-stage DDM addresses this.

Two-Stage DDM Approach

Stage 1: High Growth (Years 1-10)

Use the company's current dividend growth rate. For fast growers like Visa, this might be 12-15% annually. Calculate each year's dividend individually and discount back to present value.

Stage 2: Stable Growth (Year 11+)

Assume growth slows to a sustainable long-term rate (3-5%, roughly GDP growth). Apply the Gordon Growth Model to calculate the terminal value, then discount it back to present.

Two-Stage Example: Visa (V)

Stage 1: Dividends grow at 12% for 10 years (D0 = $2.36)

Stage 2: Dividends grow at 4% forever (terminal growth rate)

Required return: 10%

PV of Stage 1 dividends: ~$24.50

Terminal value at Year 10: $2.36 x (1.12)^10 x 1.04 / (0.10 - 0.04) = $126.91

PV of terminal value: $126.91 / (1.10)^10 = $48.93

Total intrinsic value: $24.50 + $48.93 = $73.43

Current price: ~$310. Visa trades at a premium because the market expects long-duration growth that exceeds what conservative DDM inputs capture.

Limitations of the DDM

Only Works for Dividend-Paying Stocks

The DDM cannot value companies that do not pay dividends (Amazon, Tesla, Meta until recently). It is best suited for mature, consistently dividend-paying companies like Coca-Cola, J&J, or Procter & Gamble.

Extremely Sensitive to Inputs

Small changes in the required return or growth rate drastically change the result.

Example: A stock with $2 dividend and 5% growth. At r=10%: value = $42. At r=9%: value = $52.50. At r=8%: value = $70. Just a 2% change in required return changes the value by 67%.

Growth Must Be Less Than Required Return

If g is greater than or equal to r, the formula produces a negative or infinite number, which is meaningless. This means the basic DDM breaks down for high-growth companies. Use the multi-stage model for stocks with growth rates above 8%.

Best Practice: Use DDM as One Tool Among Many

The DDM gives a useful baseline valuation, but combine it with P/E ratios, free cash flow analysis, and peer comparisons. If the DDM says a stock is undervalued AND other metrics agree, you have a stronger conviction signal.

Required Return Guidelines

What Required Return (r) Should You Use?

Low-Risk Blue Chips

JNJ, PG, KO, PEP

7-9%

Average Dividend Stocks

ABBV, TXN, HD, CVX

9-11%

Higher-Risk Dividend Payers

REITs, BDCs, MLPs

11-14%

A common approach is to use the CAPM (Capital Asset Pricing Model): r = risk-free rate + beta x equity risk premium. With the 10-year Treasury at ~4.5% and a 5.5% equity risk premium, a stock with beta 0.8 would have r = 4.5% + (0.8 x 5.5%) = 8.9%.

Try Our Dividend Growth Calculator

While our calculator focuses on projecting future dividend income rather than DDM valuation, it uses the same growth rate inputs. Model how dividends compound over 5, 10, or 20 years.

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