What’s Going On With BCE’s Dividend?

BCE stock still yields over 5% after a painful dividend cut. Here is what the company is saying about restoring it and whether the stock is worth buying now.

| More on:
Key Points
  • BCE slashed its quarterly dividend by more than 50% in May 2025, dropping from $0.9975 per share to $0.4375 per share, the first cut since 2008.
  • Management has committed to returning roughly $5 billion in dividends to shareholders over three years, signaling that the payout will remain flat for now.
  • BCE is pivoting hard into AI infrastructure and digital media, and early signs of momentum are real, but patient investors should still tread carefully.

Here is the short version: BCE (TSX:BCE) cut its dividend in 2025, does not plan to raise it anytime soon, and is betting its future on artificial intelligence and streaming.

If you can live with that, there is actually a compelling long-term case for this tech stock. If you bought BCE solely for its legendary yield, the picture is more complicated.

man looks worried about something on his phone

Source: Getty Images

BCE announced a historic dividend cut in 2025

In May 2025, BCE delivered one of the most jarring moments in its 145-year history. The company slashed its quarterly dividend from roughly $1.00 per share to $0.4375 per share.

It was the first time BCE had touched its dividend since briefly suspending payments during a failed buyout deal back in 2008.

So, why did the Canadian dividend stock reduce its payout by more than 50%?

BCE was wrestling with multiple headwinds, including fierce price competition, an unfriendly regulatory environment from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), slowing immigration, inflation, and an unsustainable payout ratio that had ballooned to 125% of free cash flow by the end of 2024.

Is the TSX dividend stock a good buy now?

BCE plans to return approximately $5 billion to shareholders in dividends over the next three years.

When you run the math, it indicates the dividend will remain at $1.75 annualized through at least 2027. The company aims to use excess free cash flow to reduce its balance sheet debt and reinvest in growth. The new target payout range is 40% to 55% of free cash flow, down from the bloated ratios of recent years.

The more interesting part of the BCE story right now is not the dividend. BCE launched three new businesses in 2025: Ateko, a technology services firm; Bell Cyber, a cybersecurity operation; and Bell AI Fabric, described as Canada’s largest full-stack artificial intelligence compute project.

The goal is for these three units to generate $2 billion in combined revenue by 2028.

Bell AI Fabric, launched in May 2025, is already scaling fast. In March 2026, BCE announced plans for a 300-megawatt data centre in Saskatchewan, the largest purpose-built AI facility in the country. Early construction has already begun.

On the media side, Crave, BCE’s streaming service, reached 4.7 million subscribers and is targeting six million by the end of 2028. The platform is among the fastest-growing products in the company’s history.  

BCE also completed the acquisition of Ziply Fiber in 2025, expanding its fibre internet reach into the Pacific Northwest of the United States.

Is BCE stock undervalued?

Incoming Board Chair Louis Vachon told shareholders at the May 2026 meeting that he has been personally buying BCE shares over the past 12 months.

At current prices, BCE still offers a dividend yield well above 5%. If the company executes on its AI and fibre strategy, the share price should eventually reflect that progress.

Down 55% from all-time highs, the Canadian tech stock has grossly underperformed broader markets in recent years.

Analysts tracking BCE stock forecast free cash flow to expand from $2.4 billion in 2026 to $4 billion in 2029. If the TSX stock is priced at 12 times forward FCF, it could deliver over 50% returns over the next three years. If we account for dividend reinvestments, cumulative returns could be closer to 70%.

Fool contributor Aditya Raghunath has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

a person looks out a window into a cityscape
Dividend Stocks

This Beaten-Down Dividend Stock Is Off 10% and Still Worth Owning

Restaurant Brands International (TSX:QSR) dipped suddenly and could be a worthy pick-up for the summer.

Read more »

chart reflected in eyeglass lenses
Dividend Stocks

Canada’s Inflation Problem Isn’t Over: 2 Stocks I’m Watching Closely

Inflation is back in the headlines, and two TSX stocks sit right where the pressure hits consumers and food costs.

Read more »

Canadian dollars in a magnifying glass
Dividend Stocks

A Perfect June TFSA With a 5.8% Monthly Payout

This Canadian monthly dividend stock is simplifying its business while rewarding investors with regular cash flow.

Read more »

A worker uses a double monitor computer screen in an office.
Dividend Stocks

The TFSA’s Hidden Fine Print When it Comes to U.S. Investments

Here's why Canadian investors should avoid holding high-yield U.S. stocks in their TFSA. (Place them in the RRSP instead.)

Read more »

Man holds Canadian dollars in differing amounts
Dividend Stocks

This 4.5% Dividend Stock Pays Cash Each and Every Month

This TSX stock is known for its reliable monthly payments and a healthy yield. Its strong underlying business will support…

Read more »

Canadian Dollars bills
Dividend Stocks

All it Takes Is $3,000 in Telus to Generate Hundreds in Passive Income

Discover how a single stock can boost your passive income. A $3,000 investment can generate steady dividends and strengthen your…

Read more »

ways to boost income
Dividend Stocks

The Ideal TFSA Stock for June Paying 6.9% Each Month

This monthly-paying stock combines a high yield with the stability of essential grocery-anchored properties.

Read more »

bank of canada governor tiff macklem
Dividend Stocks

The Bank of Canada Speaks: 2 Stocks to Take Advantage

Rate uncertainty is back. These two stocks offer a practical mix of industrial strength and income potential.

Read more »