If you’ve ever thought to yourself “I wish my dividend stocks paid me more frequently,” I could be “that guy” who points out that other people have it worse. While quarterly dividend payments are the norm here in the U.S., if you look across the pond to Europe, stock dividends frequently only come twice (in uneven amounts), and sometimes just once per year. So by comparison, we Americans have it pretty good.
But no one likes “that guy.” I’d rather be helpful instead.
The truth is, you can absolutely collect dividend income more than once every quarter, and you don’t need to buy specialized funds to do it. That’s because a few dozen American stocks pay out their dividends each and every month.
Let’s look at some of the top monthly dividend stocks—a list I’ve recently revised to remove a company that converted to quarterly payments, and to add a company that did the reverse, transitioning to a monthly payout schedule. I’ll also talk about why you should be interested in monthly dividend stocks (beyond the obvious).
Editor’s Note: Tabular data presented in this article is up-to-date as of Feb. 18, 2026.
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Disclaimer: This article does not constitute individualized investment advice. Individual securities, funds, and/or other investments appear for your consideration and not as personalized investment recommendations. Act at your own discretion.
Table of Contents
Why Monthly Dividends?

Monthly dividends, from a pure payout-schedule perspective, benefit every kind of investor in some way, but they clearly have a certain appeal to retirees.
Think about what I said before: U.S.-based stocks are the most frequent dividend payers, and even then, they’re only paying dividends every quarter. Also, they’re not paying during the same quarters—different stocks have different schedules, with some paying in Jan/Apr/Jul/Oct, some in Feb/May/Aug/Nov, and some in Mar/Jun/Sep/Dec. Well, depending on how much you have invested in stocks with different schedules, you could be receiving your checks in uneven clumps, which makes them difficult to budget around.
Monthly dividend stocks? If all goes well, you’re getting the same exact payout every month (with the occasional annual payout hike, to boot). That’s outstanding news to retirees. After all, they’re not working anymore—but they still have bills to pay, and bills still come monthly.
There’s also a tangible (albeit slight) benefit to investors of any age: quicker compounding.
When a company pays a dividend, you can choose to have it go straight to your account for use as you’d like … or you can immediately reinvest those dividends, which many people do when they’re not already retired.
Let’s say you buy $10,000 worth of shares in a stock with a 5% yield and hold it for 30 years. It never gains a dime, but you collect the same level of dividends the entire time.
— If that stock paid you quarterly, you’d end up with a balance of $44,402.13.
— If that stock paid you monthly, you’d end up with a balance of $44.677.44.
It’s not world-changing, but it’s a nice sweetener. If nothing else, it’s a case for including a few of these income investments as part of a diversified portfolio.
The Importance of Dividends

A dividend is a cash payment that a company makes to its shareholders. It’s an excellent additional source of investment return that complements price gains—and it means different things for different investors.
Dividend stocks (which commonly are value stocks, but can be growth stocks) are great ways to drive long-term performance of your portfolio. These companies pay a regular flow of their profits directly back to shareholders, meaning you receive some sort of return regardless of the ebb and flow of share prices.
Stocks that can both grow and pay dividends are the ultimate long-term stocks given just how much in additional returns they can generate over the long term.
The above image is a look at the return someone could expect if they received just the price returns from an S&P 500 over the past 25 years.
But What If I Reinvested My Dividends?

Now look at the above chart to see how much better the return is when you factor in dividends had you had reinvested those dividends back into the S&P 500 (returns illustrated by an S&P 500-tracking ETF; note that expenses are included in performance).
The price return is right around 390%. The total return (price plus dividends) is more than 670%!
But dividends can mean something else entirely when you’ve reached retirement. Specifically, they can become a source of passive income.
When you retire, you no longer receive a regular paycheck from an employer. Instead, you have to rely on Social Security checks and whatever you’ve saved up for retirement. Investors typically withdraw money from their nest egg to pay the bills in retirement, but a steady stream of stock-dividend and bond-interest income can reduce how much of your investment accounts you have to draw down—keeping your nest egg better intact for longer.
Which Stocks Pay Monthly?
One last thing to know before I introduce my list of monthly dividend payers: They’re largely not what you’d consider “normal” stocks.
A “normal” stock is, say, an Apple (AAPL) or a General Electric (GE)—virtually always a plain-vanilla C corporation with no unusual rules or designations.
But for whatever reason, most monthly dividend stocks tend to involve companies with specialized structures, such as real estate investment trusts (REITs), master limited partnerships (MLPs), business development companies (BDCs), and royalty trusts. These businesses all have one thing in common: They’re mandated to pay out large percentages of their taxable income or cash flow back to shareholders—which come in the form of dividends (or dividend-esque “distributions”).
In general, all these special classes tend to deliver much higher yields than your average stock. That’s great for income hunters, but remember: Higher yields can often involve higher risk, or at least a bigger emphasis on income at the cost of lower price returns.
So today, I’m going to point you in the direction of monthly dividend-paying stocks that largely garner positive opinions from the Wall Street analyst set. Take a look and see which ones you’ll want to target for a closer look of your own.
Stocks are listed in order of dividend yield, from smallest to largest.
Related: The 13 Best Mutual Funds You Can Buy for 2026
10. Phillips Edison
— Industry: Commercial real estate
— Market capitalization: $4.8 billion
— Dividend yield: 3.4%
Phillips Edison (PECO) is a commercial real estate investment trust that specializes in grocery-anchored neighborhood shopping centers. What are those? Well, close your eyes and think about your local strip mall that has a grocery store attached. There you go. You’ve got it.
PECO’s portfolio currently sits at nearly 330 properties, representing about 34 million square feet, across 31 states. But its most noteworthy features?
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1. Roughly 50% of its annualized base rent (ABR) come from Sun Belt states, which from a migration perspective absolutely benefits this REIT.
2. About 70% of ABR comes from necessity-based goods and services. Each property typically revolves around a large grocer, such as Publix or Kroger (KR), with the rest leased out to restaurants, personal services, medical operators, and other businesses.
Grocery-anchored real estate has been a winning formula for the past few years, at least based on Phillips Edison’s performance since going public in mid-2021. PECO shares have delivered a total return (price plus dividends) of more than 60% since then, versus a single-digit improvement for the real estate sector.
PECO doesn’t have a long track record as a publicly traded company, but this monthly dividend stock has raised its payout every year since coming public. That includes a 5.7% improvement announced in September 2025, to 10.83¢ per share.
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9. Agree Realty

— Industry: Commercial real estate
— Market capitalization: $9.2 billion
— Dividend yield: 4.1%
Agree Realty (ADC) is a net-lease REIT that operates in commercial real estate, boasting a portfolio of more than 2,670 properties, representing 55 million square feet, across all 50 states.
“Net lease” is an important differentiator that means = leases are “net” of insurance, maintenance, and taxes. Thus, tenants including Walmart (WMT), Tractor Supply (TSCO), Dollar General (DG), and Best Buy (BBY) are responsible for all three of those things. Agree Realty simply collects a rent check. This results in much more stable, more predictable income—exactly what you want when you’re relying on a stock for income.
Related: The Best Dividend Stocks: 10 Pro-Grade Income Picks for 2026
Retail real estate has been a minefield over the past decade, given the pain that e-commerce has caused traditional brick-and-mortar retailers. But not all retailers are built equally—many discretionary retailers operating malls might have been pelted, but many staples-goods retailers (think Walmart, warehouse clubs, grocers, and gas stations) are doing just fine and paying steadily climbing rents. And those are the types of tenants Agree has built its business around.
“ADC is entrepreneurial and has created value and continues to create value across its three platforms and through its relationships,” Stifel analysts say. “We believe the company is in a good position in terms of its cost of capital, liquidity, balance sheet, high-quality portfolio, and acquisition pipeline.”
“We continue to believe ADC has room to increase investment volume at relatively more attractive investment spreads than peers, fueling healthy earnings growth and continued dividend increases,” Truist Managing Director Michael Lewis (Buy) adds.
Agree Realty’s dividend program isn’t new, but it is a relative newbie among monthly dividend stocks—ADC started making more frequent payouts in 2021. Also, Agree has been improving the dividend on a semiannual basis since 2016.
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8. SmartStop Self Storage REIT
— Industry: Self-storage real estate
— Market capitalization: $1.9 billion
— Dividend yield: 4.8%
SmartStop Self Storage REIT (SMA) is a self-storage REIT that owns and/or manages 460 properties representing 35 million square feet across the U.S. and Canada.
What’s attractive about self-storage? Well, it’s a business that can thrive in both up and down economies. When people have money to spend, they often spend it—sometimes to the point where they accumulate so much stuff, it no longer fits where they live, so they decide to stash it elsewhere. However, when times are tighter, people who are forced to downsize their living situation will often store many of their possessions in hopes that they’ll eventually be able to return to a larger place in time.
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That doesn’t mean self-storage can’t go through its own hiccups—it can and is, in fact. But SmartStop currently looks like one of the most resilient players in the space.
“SMA was the only self-storage REIT in our coverage universe to report positive year-over-year same-store revenue and [same-store net operating income] growth in 3Q25, up 2.5% and 1.5%, respectively,” says Truist Managing Director Michael Lewis (Buy). “We briefly spoke with management this evening, which noted relative strength in markets such as Toronto, Asheville and Dayton, and a lack of exposure to some of the weakest U.S. self-storage markets, such as Atlanta. SMA also has little exposure to California where rent increases are currently curtailed under post-wildfire laws, or to the New York boroughs which only now seem to be turning around.”
SmartStop is one of the growthiest such businesses in North America, recently entering the top 10 largest operators in the U.S. And it’s also one of the newest REIT listings—its initial public offering (IPO) was in April 2025, so it hasn’t even been on the markets for a year.
But so far, it has paid a monthly dividend, albeit oddly. As I write this, SMA has announced 10 monthly dividends in 10 months—four of them at 13.15¢ per share, and six at 13.59¢, and not in a particular order, either. Still, that adds up to an annualized yield of nearly 5%.
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7. Realty Income

— Industry: Commercial real estate
— Market capitalization: $59.7 billion
— Dividend yield: 5.0%
Any roundup of the best monthly dividend stocks should include Realty Income (O), which literally bills itself as the “Monthly Dividend Company.”
No, really. They even registered the nickname.
Realty Income is a real estate investment trust focused on single-tenant commercial properties. It owns more than 15,500 properties in the U.S., U.K., and six other countries that are under long-term net-lease agreements. It currently boasts more than 1,600 different tenants—including 7-Eleven, Dollar General (DG), Walgreens (WBA), Wynn Resorts (WYNN), and Life Time Fitness (LTH)—across 90 widely varying industries.
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Realty Income also became a lot bigger in January 2024, when it closed on its $9.3 billion all-stock deal to acquire Spirit Realty Capital (SRC). Spirit Realty is another net-lease REIT whose properties are complementary to the Realty Income portfolio, though it made same-store growth comparisons more difficult in 2025.
“In our view, Realty Income’s 3Q’25 results and increased investment guidance demonstrate the company’s strategic capital recycling,” says UBS analyst Michael Goldsmith, who rates the stock at Buy. “We believe O continuing to drive accretive spreads should drive its valuation higher than its current premium to [triple-net-lease REITs].”
“O has been very active, acquiring both investment- and non-investment-grade assets,” add Stifel analysts (Buy). “The company has one of the sector’s strongest balance sheets, in our view, the lowest costs of capital, and pays a consistent and growing monthly dividend.”
Another reason Realty Income is a king among monthly dividend stocks? The dividends, of course. Realty Income doesn’t just offer a high yield of 5%—it has paid 668 consecutive monthly dividends and increased the payout for 113 consecutive quarters.
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6. Healthpeak Properties
— Industry: Health care/retirement real estate
— Market capitalization: $11.9 billion
— Dividend yield: 7.1%
Healthpeak Properties (DOC) is one of several REITs that’s uniquely positioned to benefit from America’s aging population.
DOC is a real estate owner, operator, and developer that sits at the intersection of health care and retirement, with a 702-property portfolio leased out to biopharmaceutical companies, physician group practices, health systems, medical device companies, retirement companies, and more. Roughly 50% of its portfolio income comes from outpatient medical facilities, another 35% is derived from labs, and the rest comes from senior housing.
That last business arm is why, although DOC has been well-regarded for some time, the stock could see at least some short-term volatility.
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“Healthpeak recently announced plans to spin off its senior housing portfolio and to leverage the sale of stabilized medical buildings to invest in cost-effective lab buildings,” says Argus Research analyst Marie Ferguson, who recently downgraded the stock from Buy to Hold. “The REIT’s relatively small Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRC) segment depressed earnings postpandemic but has been strengthening. While we see that the strategy could eventually provide long-term fundamental growth, we expect 2026 and 2027 to be periods of readjustment. With potential negative year-over-year comparisons, the shares could also respond less than some larger peers to periods positive of sector rotation.”
At least for now, however, Wall Street remains generally bullish on the stock, with 10 Buys and eight Holds against no Sell calls.
As for the dividend? Healthpeak has paid distributions for years, but the monthly schedule is a newer development. In February 2025, the company approved its first dividend increase since 2016, and also announced it would be transitioning to a monthly distribution starting with the April 2025 payout. At current levels, DOC yields more than 7%.
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5. Gladstone Investment Corp.

— Industry: BDC
— Market capitalization: $552.7 million
— Dividend yield: 10.8%*
Business development companies (BDCs) are specialized firms that provide capital for small- and midsized businesses. It’s a small niche in the public markets—only a few dozen trade on U.S. exchanges—but it’s also one of the highest-yield corners of Wall Street. That’s because, like REITs, they must distribute at least 90% of their income in the form of dividends in exchange for exemption from corporate income tax.
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Gladstone Investment Corp. (GAIN) is a BDC that specializes in acquiring mature, lower-middle-market companies. It’s a bit narrow for a BDC, at just 28 companies, though those companies are spread across 20 states and Canada, and they represent 16 different industries. Its target companies generate between $4 million and $15 million in annual EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization), and boast strong management teams as well as attractive financial and operational fundamentals.
Gladstone provides most if not all the equity and debt capital required to close transactions—a higher-risk but higher-return strategy than many other BDCs.
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“GAIN’s equity participation in most of its portfolio companies allows it to participate in the upside if a company performs above expectations,” say Oppenheimer analysts Mitchel Penn and Andrew Denkler, who rate shares at Outperform. “This has contributed to GAIN’s relatively high [return on equity].” But the pair add that the equity would also expose Gladstone to the first loss in a downturn.
Gladstone boasts an impressive dividend history, paying out 245 consecutive monthly distributions to its shareholders. Dividend growth isn’t grand, but it’s decent enough—the payout has doubled between 2011 and 2025. But with a total yield* of nearly 11%, investors haven’t had much to complain about on the income front.
* Gladstone Investment’s yield, based solely on its 8¢-per-month regular dividend, is 6.9%. However, it also pays the occasional special dividend as cash allows. A 54¢ special dividend paid in June brings its total yield up to 10.8%.
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4. Ellington Financial
— Industry: Mortgage real estate
— Market capitalization: $1.6 billion
— Dividend yield: 12.3%
Ellington Financial (EFC) is a mortgage real estate investment trust (mortgage REIT or mREIT, for short). It invests in residential and commercial mortgage loans, residential and commercial mortgage-backed securities (MBSes), consumer loans, asset-backed securities backed by consumer loans, and a number of other mortgage- and loan-related investments.
Whereas your typical equity REIT owns and possibly operates physical real estate, an mREIT deals in “paper” real estate like the instruments I just mentioned. An mREIT will take out debt to purchase mortgages and related products, and their profit is the spread between what they’re paying on debt and what they’re earning in interest income from their mortgages—known as net interest margin.
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It’s a difficult business—one that can be rocked by any number of things, including high and/or rising interest rates. Thus, Wall Street is bullish on just a handful of mREITs, Ellington among them.
“We continue to believe a premium to book is warranted given the stable book value, growing mortgage banking businesses (Longbridge and Non-QM), and recent returns that have comfortably covered the dividend,” says Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Analyst Bose George, who rates EFC at Outperform. “We also note potential growth in its mortgage banking businesses if interest rates trend down.”
Of note: In 2024, Ellington Financial reduced its monthly dividend from 15¢ per share to 13¢ as it absorbed the recent acquisition of another mREIT, Arlington Asset Investment Corp., and as a 2022 acquisition, Longbridge Financial, works on returning to profitability. Good news on the latter front: Longbridge, a reverse mortgage business, has indeed returned to the black and actually looks attractive as some Baby Boomers choose to remain in their existing homes during retirement.
Wall Street’s analyst community remains bullish on shares, with George, among others, reiterating Buy calls despite the bad news. The dividend has since stabilized, and EFC still boasts one of the largest yields among the best monthly dividend stocks covered here today.
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3. AGNC Investment Corp.

— Industry: Mortgage real estate
— Market capitalization: $12.5 billion
— Dividend yield: 12.7%
AGNC Investment Corp. (AGNC) is an “agency” mREIT, which means it deals in mortgages and MBSes from government agencies such as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. It’s also an outlier in its sheer size; it’s almost in large-cap territory, which is a rarity for this business, and a trait that has kept AGNC shares trading at a premium compared to peers.
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Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, which rates AGNC at Outperform, is broadly bullish on agency MBSes.
“We remain most constructive on the agency MBS REITs as we head into 2026,” KBW analysts say. “While agency MBS spreads have tightened in the back half of 2025, we think technicals should keep them at current levels next year. We expect spreads to benefit from a steeper yield curve as the Fed cuts, increased bank participation in the market, and continued participation by the GSE retained portfolios, which has become a factor in the market over the past few months as their buying has increased meaningfully.”
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They add that within the group, AGNC is one of their favorites, in large part because nearly 100% of the company’s capital is allocated to agency MBSes.
One of the most important things to note when evaluating AGNC is its long-term history, which involves a number of dividend cuts. That’s not terribly unusual in the mREIT space, but it merits acknowledging. AGNC’s last dividend cut came in 2020. The payout hasn’t rebounded since, and it might not for a while, but for, it at least appears stable.
“We believe AGNC shares offer an attractive dividend yield,” says JPMorgan analyst Richard Shane (Overweight), “and the dividend is secure at current spread levels.”
On the bright side, AGNC is still a mammoth yielder at roughly 13%. But if you own it, you’ll also need to devote a higher level of attention to monitoring its dividend stability.
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2. AGNC Investment Corp.
— Industry: BDC
— Market capitalization: $1.2 billion
— Dividend yield: 13.1%
Trinity Capital (TRIN) is another BDC, this one focused on high-growth companies. It provides senior secured term loans to institutionally backed tech companies and commercial-stage life science companies; secured term loans to PE-backed software companies; equipment finance; and asset-based lending to special purpose vehicles (SPVs).
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Its portfolio of about a couple hundred firms includes wearable designer Whoop, launch service and spacecraft component provider RocketLab, non-alcoholic craft brewer Athletic Brewing, and arthroplasty-focused medical device firm Shoulder Innovations.
“TRIN’s strong yield preservation, continued momentum in originations, and platform expansion plans provide meaningful upside potential in the near term, in our view,” says B. Riley Securities analyst Sean-Paul Adams, who rates the stock at Buy.
Most recently, in early February, Trinity Capital recently released preliminary results for its fourth quarter that exceeded analyst expectations.
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“TRIN has the lowest asset sensitivities to rate cuts out of the group (due to rate floors),” says Jefferies analyst John Hecht, who rates the stock at Buy. “We see strong growth potential as TRIN focuses on niche sectors that are in high-demand and require scale, evidenced by pre-announced investments funded of $435M, above our 4Q estimate.”
Trinity is the newest addition to our monthly dividend stocks. It has long demonstrated the necessary quality, but it only recently became a monthly dividend payer. In December 2025, the company announced the shift, which took effect in January with a 17¢-per-share monthly distribution. (Editor’s note: Trinity replaces Whitestone REIT, which went from a monthly to quarterly schedule effective January 2026.)
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1. Dynex Capital

— Industry: Mortgage real estate
— Market capitalization: $2.8 billion
— Dividend yield: 14.6%
Dynex Capital (DX) is the longest-tenured mREIT, founded in 1987. Its portfolio is 97% agency residential MBSes (RMBSes), and the lion’s share of the remainder is agency commercial MBSes (CMBSes).
Like with AGNC, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods is favorable on DX. “We expect valuation to trend up as market cap increases, which should continue as the company issues equity accretively and returns remain strong,” say KBW analysts, who rate the stock at Outperform and add that they “believe the dividend is reasonably well covered.”
Few analysts cover Dynex, which is typical for the mREIT industry. Still, among these few pros, the bulls are the majority—DX has four Buy-equivalent calls (including from KBW) versus two Holds and no Sells.
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Dynex pays the most generous monthly dividend on this list, at nearly 15% as I write this. Like AGNC, Dynex has hacked away its payout in the past—indeed, the dividend shrunk by 85% between 2012 and 2020, to 13¢ per share monthly. It remained there until mid-2024, when Dynex announced its first dividend raise in more than a decade—to 15¢ per share. It followed that up with another hike in 2025, to 17¢, as of its April payout.
Still, that history reminds us that double-digit yields are hardly risk-free.
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What Is Dividend Yield?
Dividend yield is a simple financial ratio that tells you the percentage of a company’s share price that is paid out across a year’s worth of dividend distributions. Expressed as a mathematical equation, it’s simply:
Dividend yield = annual dividend / price x 100
Yield helps dividend investors normalize dividend payments regardless of stock price, different quarterly payments, even different payment frequencies (like monthly or annually). For instance, each of the following fictional stocks all have a dividend yield of 2.5%:
— Alpha Corp. currently trades for $40 a share. It pays a 25¢ quarterly dividend, for $1.00 per year in full. ($1 / $40 x 100 = 2.5%)
— Beta Inc. pays $1 in the first quarter, $2 in Q2, $3 in Q3 and $4 in Q4. That’s $10 in dividends for the full year. It trades for $400 a share. ($10 / $400 x 100 = 2.5%)
— Gamma Ltd. pays $2.50 just once per year. It trades for $100 a share. ($2.50 / $100 x 100 = 2.5%)
The idea is to focus on the percent of your initial investment you get back, and help you compare apples to apples.
Taking this math a step further, you learn that a company can suddenly feature a very high dividend yield through one of two very different ways: the share price falling very quickly, or the dividend growing very rapidly.
Alpha Corp., which trades for $40 per share, pays a 25¢ quarterly dividend that yields 2.5%. In a month, it yields 5.0%. Here are two ways that could have happened.
— Alpha Corp. doubled its dividend to 50¢ per share, for a full $2 per share across the year. The share price stays the same. ($2 / $40 x 100 = 5.0%)
— Alpha Corp. kept its dividend the same, but its share price plunged in half to $20 per share. ($1 / $20 x 100 = 5.0%)
Clearly, that 5% yield appears to be much safer and reliable in one scenario than the other.
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What Is a Payout Ratio?

As with dividend yield, it’s important to normalize the dividend payout ratio for a stock. This is simply the percentage of a company’s earnings per share that is being distributed via dividends. It’s calculated as:
Payout ratio = dividends per share / earnings per share x 100
As an example, a stock that makes $100 million in profits and has 10 million shares of public stock has $10 in earnings per share. And if that company pays $5 annually in dividends, it has a payout ratio of 50% ($5 / $10 x 100 = 50%).
There’s a lot of “gray” when it comes to payout ratios. In general, though, the lower the payout ratio, the more sustainable the dividend, and the more room for future hikes.
Note: Payout ratio is calculated using different metrics depending on the type of business you’re looking at. For typical companies, you look at earnings. But, for example, when working with REITs, you typically calculate payout ratio using funds from operations (FFO), which is an important measure of REIT profitability.
What Is ‘Yield on Cost’?
When you look up a stock’s information, the dividend yield listed is based on the most recent dividend and the current stock price.
That yield is often actually different than the one current shareholders enjoy. That yield is called “yield on cost,” which is the payout based on what you paid, at the moment you invested.
Let’s say you buy a stock at $100, and it pays $1 per share. It yields 1.0% when you buy it ($1 / $100 x 100 = 1.0%).
In a year, that stock has doubled to $200 per share, and it also doubled its dividend to $2 per share. If you look up its information, its dividend is still 1.0% ($2 / $200 x 100 = 1.0%).
That’s not your yield on cost, however. You’re still receiving that higher dividend of $2 per share. But your cost basis is still the original $100 you bought the share at. So now, your yield on cost has doubled, to 2.0% ($2 / $100 * 100 = 2.0%)!
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Related: 15 Best Long-Term Stocks to Buy and Hold Forever
As even novice investors probably know, funds—whether they’re mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs)—are the simplest and easiest ways to invest in the stock market. But the best long-term stocks also offer many investors a way to stay “invested” intellectually—by following companies they believe in. They also provide investors with the potential for outperformance.
So if you’re looking for a starting point for your own portfolio, look no further. Check out our list of the best long-term stocks for buy-and-hold investors.
Related: Vanguard’s 7 Best Dividend Funds for 2026
What’s better than a smart, sound dividend income strategy? How about a smart, sound dividend income strategy with very little money coming out of your pocket?
If that sounds good to you, you need look no farther than low-cost pioneer Vanguard, which offers up a number of payout-oriented products. Find out what you need to know in our list of seven top-notch Vanguard dividend funds.
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