Plan when dividend income arrives across 1,000+ ASX stocks. Filter by month, sector, and yield.
Historical payment patterns based on typical dividend months.
Ex-dividend dates and payment schedules for healthcare stocks on the ASX. Past dividend payments are not guaranteed for future periods.
April 2026 has 1 Healthcare stock going ex-dividend on the ASX.
Regis Healthcare Limited
WEAK
Full analysis →
Ex-Div Date
12 Mar 2026
Passed
Payment Date
9 Apr 2026
Confirmed
Yield
1.6%
2.0% gross
Franking
57%
Div/Share
$0.0900
Healthcare
CSL Limited
WEAK
Full analysis →
Ex-Div Date
10 Mar 2026
Passed
Payment Date
9 Apr 2026
Confirmed
Yield
2.3%
2.4% gross
Franking
2%
Div/Share
$1.8098
Healthcare
Monash IVF Group Limited
WEAK
Full analysis →
Ex-Div Date
4 Mar 2026
Passed
Payment Date
10 Apr 2026
Confirmed
Yield
5.5%
7.9% gross
Franking
100%
Div/Share
$0.0120
Healthcare
Vita Life Sciences Limited
WEAK
Full analysis →
Ex-Div Date
27 Mar 2026
Passed
Payment Date
10 Apr 2026
Confirmed
Yield
3.2%
4.5% gross
Franking
96%
Div/Share
$0.0950
Healthcare
Cochlear Limited
WEAK
Full analysis →
Ex-Div Date
19 Mar 2026
Passed
Payment Date
13 Apr 2026
Confirmed
Yield
1.9%
2.3% gross
Franking
54%
Div/Share
$2.1500
Healthcare
The ex-dividend date is the cutoff date for dividend eligibility. To receive the next dividend payment, you must own shares before this date. If you buy on or after the ex-date, you won't receive the upcoming dividend. On the ASX, shares typically trade at a lower price on the ex-date, reflecting the dividend that has been separated from the share.
The ex-dividend date determines eligibility; the payment date is when the money arrives in your account. On the ASX, payment dates are typically 4–6 weeks after the ex-dividend date. For income planning, focus on payment dates to understand when your dividend income will be available.
Franking credits (imputation credits) represent company tax already paid on profits distributed as dividends. Fully franked dividends carry a tax credit that can reduce your personal tax liability or result in a refund. The gross yield — which includes franking credits — gives a more complete picture of a dividend's value for Australian tax residents. Franking is calculated as: franking credit = net dividend × (company tax rate ÷ (1 − company tax rate)).
Dates marked Confirmed come directly from company announcements. Dates marked Est are estimated from historical payment patterns — typically accurate within a few weeks, but subject to change when the company officially announces.