Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU) is set to pay its next quarterly dividend later this month, with eligible shareholders scheduled to receive $0.15 per share on July 21, 2026.
The dividend remains unchanged from the company’s previous quarterly distribution, reflecting a consistent payout policy despite Micron’s strong share price performance over the past year.
Based on its annualized dividend of $0.60 per share, the stock offers a dividend yield of approximately 0.06% based on its last closing price of $975.56.
Investors holding 100 Micron shares will receive $15 before applicable taxes from the upcoming payment.

Assuming the company maintains its current quarterly dividend of $0.15 per share, shareholders with 100 shares would earn $60 in annual dividend income before taxes.
To qualify for the July payment, investors had to own Micron shares before the July 6, 2026, ex-dividend date. Shares purchased on or after the ex-dividend date are not eligible for this dividend.
While Micron’s dividend yield remains relatively modest, the company’s investment case continues to be driven primarily by capital appreciation rather than income.
Micron’s impressive 2026 run
The semiconductor giant has been one of the best-performing large-cap stocks over the past year as demand for artificial intelligence memory chips continues to accelerate.
Shares have surged more than 700% over the past 12 months and approximately 242% year-to-date, pushing Micron’s market capitalization above $1.1 trillion despite a recent pullback.

The company recently reported record fiscal third-quarter results, with revenue climbing to $41.46 billion, driven by booming demand for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in AI accelerators.
Micron also issued strong guidance for the current quarter, forecasting revenue of around $50 billion at the midpoint.
Demand for AI memory remains the company’s key growth driver, with Micron reporting that its HBM production capacity is fully booked through 2026 under long-term supply agreements.
At the same time, Wall Street remains overwhelmingly bullish on Micron’s long-term prospects as AI infrastructure spending continues to expand.
Although the dividend provides a modest stream of recurring income, Micron remains a growth-oriented technology stock, with most investor returns expected to come from earnings growth and potential share price appreciation rather than dividend income.