How to Calculate Diluted Earnings Per Share (EPS)

When you’re looking at a company’s profitability, one number that often pops up is Earnings Per Share (EPS). But did you know there’s a more conservative version called Diluted EPS?

Let’s break it down so it’s super easy to understand — no finance degree needed! 😄

💡 What is Diluted EPS?

Diluted EPS shows how much profit a company earns per share, if all potential shares were converted into actual shares.

These potential shares can come from:

  • Stock options
  • Convertible bonds
  • Convertible preferred shares
  • Warrants

Why does this matter? Because if more shares are added, each one gets a smaller slice of the earnings pie. 🍰

📊 Diluted EPS Formula

Here’s the standard formula:

Diluted EPS = (Net Income – Preferred Dividends) ÷ (Weighted Avg Shares + Potential Diluted Shares)

✅ Example

Let’s say a company has:

  • Net income = $1,000,000
  • Preferred dividends = $100,000
  • Weighted average shares = 500,000
  • Potential shares from stock options = 50,000

Step 1: Subtract preferred dividends from net income

$1,000,000 – $100,000 = $900,000

Step 2: Add potential shares to the average shares

500,000 + 50,000 = 550,000

Step 3: Divide to get diluted EPS

Diluted EPS = $900,000 ÷ 550,000 = $1.64

So, diluted EPS = $1.64 per share.

Compare that to the basic EPS, which would’ve been:

Basic EPS = $900,000 ÷ 500,000 = $1.80

See the difference? 📉 The diluted version is lower — and that’s the point!

🧠 Why Use Diluted EPS?

Diluted EPS gives investors a realistic worst-case scenario. If all possible shares were turned into real shares, what would the earnings look like per share?

It’s a conservative and more transparent view of a company’s profitability.

🔍 Basic EPS vs Diluted EPS

MetricWhat It Shows
Basic EPSProfit per actual share
Diluted EPSProfit per share if all convertibles are issued

Investors often use both when analyzing a company’s performance!

📝 Quick Recap

Diluted EPS = (Net Income – Preferred Dividends) ÷ (Avg Shares + Potential Shares)

Use this when you want to understand how additional shares could dilute your slice of earnings pie.