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Walmart (NASDAQ:WMT) and Costco (NASDAQ:COST) both posted strong quarterly results, though their dividend growth rates differ sharply. Walmart is a Dividend King with 52-plus consecutive years of increases. Costco is growing its regular payout at more than twice Walmart’s recent rate.

  • Walmart (WMT) raised its annual dividend to $0.99 per share (5.3% growth) and reported Q4 U.S. comparable sales of 4.6% with global eCommerce surging 24% and advertising revenue reaching $6.40B annually.

  • Costco (COST) lifted its quarterly dividend to $1.30 per share (12% growth) with comparable sales up 7.4%, 82.1M paid memberships, and an 89.7% renewal rate.

  • Costco’s dividend is growing at more than twice Walmart’s pace while both retailers posted strong quarterly results, but their strategies diverge: Walmart relies on omnichannel expansion and advertising revenue, while Costco profits from membership fees and high customer loyalty despite razor-thin 11.02% gross margins.

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Walmart’s Q4 FY26 results showed a business firing across nearly every channel. Walmart U.S. comparable sales rose 4.6%, while global eCommerce grew 24% year over year and now represents 23% of Walmart U.S. net sales, a record. The advertising business reached roughly $6.40 billion annually, growing 37% including VIZIO.

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Costco’s Q2 FY26 told a different story. Comparable sales rose 7.4%, and the membership engine kept humming. Paid memberships reached 82.1 million, with a worldwide renewal rate of 89.7%. Membership fee income grew 13.6% to $1.355 billion.

Digital momentum accelerated with digitally-enabled comparable sales up 22.6% and app visits surging 63%. Costco’s model is intentionally lean: gross margin runs at roughly 3.67% operating margin, with profitability flowing from volume and member loyalty rather than product markup.

Business Driver

Walmart

Costco

Comp Sales Growth

+4.6% (U.S.)

+7.4% (global)

eCommerce Growth

+27% (U.S.)

+22.6% (digitally-enabled)

Key Revenue Lever

Advertising + omnichannel

Membership fees + Kirkland

Gross Margin

24.0%

11.02%

Walmart raised its annual dividend to $0.99 per share for 2026, up from $0.94 in 2025. The quarterly increase from $0.235 to $0.2475 represents roughly 5.3% growth.

Costco’s regular quarterly dividend moved from $1.16 to $1.30, effective in early 2026, an increase of approximately 12% (more than twice Walmart’s pace).

Annualized, Costco’s regular dividend now runs at $5.20 per share. Add Costco’s history of special dividends, including a $15 special dividend paid in December 2023, and total shareholder returns diverge from yield alone.

Dividend Metric

Walmart

Costco

Current Annual Regular Dividend

$0.99

$5.20

Recent Dividend Growth Rate

~5.3%

~12%

Dividend Yield

0.73%

0.5%

Special Dividends

None recent

Yes, most recently $15.00 in 2023

Walmart guided for FY27 net sales growth of 3.5%-4.5% and adjusted EPS of $2.75-$2.85. Tariff exposure and rising capex of $26.64 billion in FY26 are headwinds. Watch whether the advertising business continues scaling and whether Walmart+ membership revenue, up 15.1% globally, keeps compounding.

Costco is targeting roughly 28 net new warehouses in FY2026, reaching 942 total warehouses. With $17.38 billion in cash on hand and free cash flow of $7.84 billion, the balance sheet supports expansion. Monitor whether membership renewal rates hold above 89% as new warehouses open in less-proven markets.

Walmart’s streak is impressive, and at a 41.15% one-year price gain, total return has been strong. But the dividend itself is growing slowly relative to valuation. Costco’s regular dividend compounds faster, and the company has shown willingness to return surplus cash through special payouts when the balance sheet allows.

Walmart fits if you prioritize consistency and mass-market retail dominance. Costco makes the stronger case for long-term income growth, pairing faster dividend increases with a membership model that generates deeply loyal, recurring revenue. Neither is cheap at current multiples, so entry price matters for both.

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