
iShares Select U.S. REIT ETF
ICFDividend History
| Pay Date | Amount | Ex-Date | Record Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 18, 2026 | $0.38 | 2026-06-15 | 2026-06-15 |
| March 20, 2026 | $0.19 | 2026-03-17 | 2026-03-17 |
| December 19, 2025 | $0.69 | 2025-12-16 | 2025-12-16 |
| September 19, 2025 | $0.40 | 2025-09-16 | 2025-09-16 |
| June 20, 2025 | $0.37 | 2025-06-16 | 2025-06-16 |
Dividends Summary
- Consistent Payer: iShares Select U.S. REIT ETF has rewarded shareholders with 76 dividend payments over the past 19 years.
- Total Returned Value: Investors who held ICF shares during this period received a total of $46.36 per share in dividend income.
- Latest Payout: The most recent dividend of $0.38/share was paid 30 days ago, on June 18, 2026.
- Yield & Schedule: ICF currently pays dividends quarterly with an annual yield of 2.39%.
- Dividend Growth: Since 2007, the dividend payout has decreased by 44.2%, from $0.68 to $0.38.
Company News
The article compares two iShares REIT ETFs: REET, which offers global diversification across 350+ holdings with a lower 0.14% expense ratio and 3.3% yield, versus ICF, which concentrates on 34 large U.S. REITs with a 0.32% expense ratio and 2.4% yield. REET is recommended for most long-term investors due to its lower costs, higher yield, and broa...
The article compares two real estate ETFs: iShares Select U.S. REIT ETF (ICF), which offers concentrated exposure to 30 U.S. REITs with strong AI-driven data center holdings, and Vanguard Global ex-U.S. Real Estate ETF (VNQI), which provides diversified international real estate exposure with lower costs and higher dividend yields. ICF has outper...
Schwab U.S. REIT ETF (SCHH) emerges as the more attractive option compared to iShares Select U.S. REIT ETF (ICF), offering a significantly lower expense ratio of 0.07% versus 0.32%, higher dividend yield of 2.8% versus 2.5%, and broader diversification with 120 holdings versus 30. Both funds delivered similar five-year performance, but Schwab's l...
The Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ) offers broad exposure across 158 U.S. REITs with a lower expense ratio (0.13%) and higher dividend yield (3.63%), while the iShares Select U.S. REIT ETF (ICF) concentrates on 30 large-cap REITs with a higher expense ratio (0.32%) and lower yield (2.6%). Despite higher costs, ICF has outperformed VNQ over five ye...
HAUZ and ICF offer contrasting real estate investment approaches. HAUZ provides global real estate exposure across 445 holdings with a lower 0.10% expense ratio and 4.0% dividend yield, while ICF focuses on 34 large-cap U.S. REITs with a 0.32% expense ratio and 2.6% yield. HAUZ delivered stronger one-year returns (19.6% vs 7.4%), but ICF showed b...



