📘 Learn › Cumulative vs Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock
Cumulative vs Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock
The short answer
If the company skips your preferred dividend:
- Cumulative — it piles up as arrears and must be paid back in full before common shareholders get anything.
- Non-cumulative — it is gone forever. You have no claim to it.
That is it. One word in the prospectus, and it decides what a suspension actually costs you.
Why it matters more than the yield
Two preferreds from two banks might both yield 6.4%. If one is cumulative and one is not, they are not the same security. The cumulative issue carries a built-in catch-up promise. The non-cumulative one does not.
In the good times you will never notice. The distinction only shows up in the exact moment you most need protection — when the issuer is under stress and stops paying.
How cumulative arrears actually work
Say a company suspends a cumulative 6% / $25 preferred (that is $1.50 a year) for two years. It has accumulated $3.00 per share in arrears.
Before that company can pay one dollar of common dividend, or buy back a single common share, it must clear that $3.00. This is called the dividend blocker, and it is real leverage: management is highly motivated to catch up so it can resume rewarding common shareholders.
Many cumulative prospectuses add a second protection: if the company falls, say, six quarters behind, preferred holders gain the right to elect directors to the board.
How non-cumulative works
There is no catch-up and no blocker of that kind. The company simply skips the quarter. It may resume the preferred dividend next quarter — or never. Practically, most issuers still cannot pay a common dividend while skipping the preferred (their own charter usually forbids it), but there is no obligation to repay what was missed.
Why nearly every bank preferred is non-cumulative
This is not an accident or a trick. It is regulation.
Under Basel III, a bank can only count a preferred toward Additional Tier 1 (AT1) regulatory capital if the dividend is non-cumulative and fully discretionary. A cumulative obligation looks too much like debt to count as loss-absorbing capital.
So if the issuer is a bank — JPMorgan, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, a regional bank — assume the preferred is non-cumulative until the prospectus says otherwise.
By contrast, REITs, utilities, shipping companies and BDCs face no such rule, and their preferreds are frequently cumulative.
Does cumulative actually save you?
Be realistic. Cumulative status is a meaningful protection, but it is not a guarantee:
- Arrears are only worth something if the company survives and recovers.
- In a bankruptcy, preferred holders — cumulative or not — sit below every lender and often recover little.
- A company can stay suspended for years. Your capital is tied up and you are collecting nothing.
What cumulative really buys you is a stronger claim in a recovery, and a management team with a powerful incentive to make you whole.
How to check
Do not guess from the ticker. Every issue we track shows a Cumulative: Yes / No field on its symbol page, taken from the security's own SEC prospectus — not inferred. You can also read the prospectus yourself; we link to the exact SEC filing on every page. See How to read a preferred stock prospectus.
Key takeaways
- Cumulative: skipped dividends accrue and must be repaid before any common dividend.
- Non-cumulative: skipped dividends are gone permanently.
- Bank preferreds are almost always non-cumulative — a regulatory capital requirement.
- Two preferreds with identical yields can carry very different protection. Always check.
Filter for cumulative issues in the screener, or read what happens if a preferred dividend is suspended.
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.