Alphabet’s free cash flow just fell to $10.1 billion as capex jumped to $35.7 billion in a single quarter. See exactly how the payout stacks up on TIKR for free →
Alphabet (GOOGL) delivered its dividend news almost in passing on the Q1 earnings call for the first quarter of 2026. CFO Anat Ashkenazi noted the board “declared a 5% increase in the quarterly dividend” while walking through balance sheet figures, and that timing matters. The same rundown showed free cash flow dropping to $10.1 billion for the quarter, a steep step down from the $64.4 billion Alphabet generated over the trailing 12 months.
Ashkenazi tied the drop directly to spending. Capital expenditures reached $35.7 billion in the first quarter alone, with roughly 60% going into servers and the rest into data centers and networking equipment. Operating cash flow held at $45.8 billion for the quarter, but capex consumed nearly all of it. And the spending is not slowing. Ashkenazi raised full-year 2026 capex guidance to a range of $180 billion to $190 billion, up from $175 billion to $185 billion, then went further, telling analysts that 2027 capex will “significantly increase” compared to 2026.
Meanwhile, Sundar Pichai framed that spending as demand-driven, pointing to Cloud revenue that grew 63% to exceed $20 billion for the first time and a Cloud backlog that nearly doubled quarter-on-quarter to over $460 billion.
Net income climbed 81% to $62.6 billion, and earnings per share rose 82% to $5.11, though Ashkenazi attributed much of that jump to unrealized gains in Alphabet’s nonmarketable equity securities portfolio rather than core operations.
Set against that backdrop, the dividend increase reads as a signal of confidence rather than a strain on the balance sheet. Alphabet chose to raise the payout in the very quarter it disclosed rising capex commitments stretching into 2027.
Alphabet’s capex is set to climb again in 2027 after already hitting $35.7 billion in a single quarter. Dig into the full spending picture on TIKR for free →
GOOGL Stock Dividends (TIKR)
Alphabet’s quarterly dividend now stands at $0.22, up from $0.21 in each of the two prior quarters, matching the 5% increase management announced on the call.
GOOGL Stock Payout Ratio (TIKR)
The payout ratio tells the same story from a different angle. It fell to 4% for the quarter ended March 31, 2026, down from 7% the quarter before and well below the 10% level from mid-2024.
A payout ratio that low, paired with a dividend management just chose to raise, cuts against any thesis that Alphabet stock’s payout is stretched. If anything, the ratio suggests Alphabet stock could support a considerably larger dividend without touching its earnings base.
GOOGL Stock Dividend Yield (TIKR)
Dividend yield held at 0.3% as of July 2, 2026, unchanged from the prior quarter and down from 0.5% a year earlier. That decline says more about the stock’s price appreciation than about the payout itself, since the per-share dividend rose over the same stretch.
A payout ratio climbing back into the 7% to 9% range it touched at points in 2025 would be the clearest sign the dividend’s footing is tightening again
TIKR’s mid case model targets $638 for Alphabet stock by December 2030, projecting a 77% total return and a 14% annualized rate from today’s $360 price.
GOOGL Stock Valuation Model Results (TIKR)
That return profile puts Alphabet stock among the more compelling large cap total-return stories heading into the back half of the decade, with the dividend contributing a small slice of the overall return.
The target rests on the growth Pichai and Ashkenazi laid out on the call: Cloud revenue up 63% to $20 billion, a backlog approaching $462 billion, and enterprise AI product revenue up nearly 800% year over year.
Alphabet is funding that growth with a 2026 capex range of $180 billion to $190 billion, a bet the model treats as the engine behind the target, not a threat to it.
TIKR’s model points to a 77% total return for Alphabet stock by 2030. Check the assumptions behind that target on TIKR for free →
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