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Are Preferred Stock Dividends Qualified? (And When They're Not)
The short answer
Often, yes. Dividends paid by most U.S. C-corporation preferred stocks are qualified dividends — taxed at the lower long-term capital-gains rates rather than as ordinary income — provided you hold the shares long enough.
But there are large, common exceptions where the answer is a firm no.
Why it matters
Qualified dividends are taxed at preferential long-term capital-gains rates. Ordinary income is taxed at your marginal rate. For a high-bracket investor, the same $1,000 of income can carry a meaningfully different tax bill purely because of how the security is classified.
In a taxable brokerage account, this can quietly outweigh a few tenths of a percent of extra yield. (In an IRA or 401(k), the distinction generally does not matter.)
The big exceptions — where dividends are NOT qualified
- REIT preferreds. Real estate investment trusts do not pay corporate tax, so their distributions — including on preferred shares — are generally ordinary income, not qualified dividends. Many preferreds in the income world are REIT preferreds.
- Baby bonds. These pay interest, not dividends. Interest is ordinary income, reported on a 1099-INT. See preferred stock vs baby bonds.
- Trust preferred securities. Despite the name, these typically pay interest and are taxed as ordinary income.
- BDC preferreds. Business development companies are pass-through vehicles; their distributions are frequently ordinary income.
- Some foreign issuers. Qualification depends on the country's tax treaty status.
The holding-period trap
Even a genuinely qualifying preferred loses the lower rate if you do not hold it long enough around the ex-dividend date. This catches dividend-capture strategies in particular: buy just before the ex-date, sell just after, and the dividend is taxed as ordinary income.
Note that preferred stock has its own, longer holding-period rule when the dividend is attributable to a period exceeding 366 days — which is common for preferreds paying arrears. The exact day counts are technical; confirm them against current IRS guidance rather than memory.
How to check what you actually received
Do not guess. Your broker tells you:
- Form 1099-DIV, Box 1a — total ordinary dividends.
- Form 1099-DIV, Box 1b — the portion that is qualified.
- Form 1099-INT — interest (baby bonds, trust preferreds). Never qualified.
If Box 1b is materially smaller than Box 1a, some of your "preferred dividends" were not qualified.
A practical way to think about it
- Bank, insurer, utility, industrial preferred (a normal C-corp)? Likely qualified.
- REIT preferred? Likely ordinary income.
- Anything labelled a note, debenture, or baby bond? Interest — ordinary income.
- Holding it in an IRA? The distinction largely does not matter.
Key takeaways
- Most U.S. C-corp preferred dividends can be qualified; the holding period must be met.
- REIT preferreds, baby bonds, trust preferreds and BDCs generally are not.
- The security type — not the yield — determines your after-tax income.
- Verify with your 1099 and a tax professional. Rules change.
Each symbol page states the security type and sector, so you can see at a glance whether you are looking at a REIT preferred or a baby bond.
Frequently asked questions
This guide is for education only. Nothing here is investment, tax, or legal advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Figures on this site are drawn from SEC filings and live market data; always verify terms in the issuer's own prospectus before investing.