8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (2024)

8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (1)

8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (2)

By Nellie S. Huang

published

Just how important are stock dividends? Over the long haul, these cash payouts have accounted for some 40% of overall U.S. market returns. In periods of poor stock market performance, they’ve played an even larger role in returns. For that reason, we set out to find the best dividend-oriented exchange-traded funds. As you’ll see, each ETF has its own strategy, tied to the particular index it tracks.

Topics

ListsInvesting For IncomeThe Vanguard GroupDow Jones Industrial Average

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (3)

ALPS Sector Dividend Dogs ETF

  • Share price: $38.81Current yield: 3.8%Assets: $1.1 billionExpense ratio: 0.40%Top five holdings: Oneok, Baxter International, Cummins, Pfizer, Navient
  • SEE ALSO: Vanguard ETFs vs. Vanguard Mutual Funds: Which Make for Better Investments?

Value investors will appreciate ALPS Sector Dividend Dogs ETF (SDOG).

It takes the Dogs of the Dow strategy, which invests in the 10 highest-yielding stocks in the Dow Jones industrial average, and applies it to the top yielders across the 10 sectors of Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index. The fund’s 49 stocks—representing the highest yielders in each sector – are equally weighted. So each stock represents roughly 2% of the ETF’s assets, and each sector, 10%. From the ETF’s launch in June 2012, it returned 15.7% annualized, outpacing the returns of two of the most popular dividend ETFs, Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG) and iShares Select Dividend ETF (DVY), by an average of 3.6 and 1.8 percentage points per year, respectively. The S&P 500 returned 13.6% annualized over that same period.

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (5)

iShares Select Dividend Index ETF

  • Share price: $81.69Current yield: 3.2%Assets: $14.6 billionExpense ratio: 0.39%Top five holdings: Lockheed Martin, CME Group, Chevron, Philip Morris International, McDonald's

This ETF follows a Dow Jones benchmark that includes 95% of publicly traded U.S. stocks (excluding real estate investment trusts) that have maintained or increased dividends over the past five years. iShares Select Dividend Index (DVY) is heavy in utilities, with 30% of its assets in the sector. Over the past five years, Select Dividend Index returned 12.7% annualized, beating the S&P 500 by an average of 1.6 percentage points per year. Over that period, the ETF was about 18.5% less volatile than the index, too.

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (7)

Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF

  • Share price: $39.90Current yield: 3.1%Assets: $3.4 billionExpense ratio: 0.07%Top five holdings: Pfizer, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Johnson & Johnson, PepsiCo

With its minuscule expense ratio, Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD) is the cheapest of all the funds highlighted in this feature.

To be eligible for this ETF, a company must have paid dividends every year for at least 10 years and must boast a market capitalization of at least $500 million. A company must be financially strong, too, based on four measures, such as return on equity (a measure of profitability) and five-year dividend growth rate. Finally, only stocks with significant trading volume qualify. U.S. Dividend Equity, a member of the Kiplinger ETF 20, the list of our favorite ETFs, launched in October 2011. Since then, the fund returned 14% annualized. That trails the 14.7% annualized return in the S&P 500. The fund has done well so far this year, climbing 4.3%, thanks in part to Chevron and ExxonMobil, which notched 13% and 13.6% gains, respectively.

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (9)

SPDR S&P Dividend ETF

  • Share price: $80.72Current yield: 2.4%Assets: $13.5 billionExpense ratio: 0.35%Top five holdings: HCP, AT&T, Chevron, Old Republic International, AbbVie
  • SPDR S&P Dividend (SDY) isn’t just for snobs, despite the snooty-sounding name of the index it tracks: S&P High Yield Dividend Aristocrats.
  • SEE ALSO: Income Investing: Why I Stand by Muni Bonds

The moniker makes sense when you find out what membership requires. Out of the S&P Composite 1500 index, which represents 90% of all publicly traded U.S. companies, only those firms that have raised their dividend without pause in each of the past 20 years are permitted entry. This requirement tilts the index—and thus, the ETF—toward growing, high-quality firms. The fund holds 107 stocks and weights them by dividend yield. This is the fund to own in down markets. In 2008, when the S&P 500 plummeted 37.0%, S&P Dividend ETF dropped 23.1%. During the 2011 correction, when the S&P 500 lost 18.6%, this ETF held up better, slipping 13.6%.

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (11)

Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF

  • Share price: $81.11Current yield: 2.2%Assets: $20.7 billionExpense ratio: 0.10%Top five holdings: Microsoft, Coca-Cola, Johnson & Johnson, PepsiCo, CVS Health
  • TAKE THE QUIZ: How Well Do You Know Your Dividends?

This low-cost ETF is the biggest one on our list. Like SPDR S&P Dividend, Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG) focuses on companies that raise their dividends, not stocks with high yields. Only U.S. companies that have increased their dividends every year for at least the past 10 years make it into the fund (the fund excludes REITs and master limited partnerships).

Today, 186 stocks make the grade. Because of the fund’s requirements, consumer stocks and industrials make up almost half of the fund’s assets. Interestingly, financial firms account for only 8% of assets, a legacy of the financial crisis, which forced many banks to cut dividends or, at best, stop raising them. The fund’s 10-year annualized return of 7.1% narrowly beats the 6.8% average yearly gain of the S&P 500.

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (13)

Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF

  • Share price: $69.05Current yield: 3.2%Assets: $13.4 billionExpense ratio: 0.09%Top five holdings: Microsoft, ExxonMobil, General Electric, Johnson & Johnson, Wells Fargo
  • SEE ALSO: 6 Great Dividend Stocks for Retirees

At first glance, Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (VYM) may seem awfully similar to Vanguard Dividend Appreciation. The two ETFs charge roughly the same fees and share the same top holding, Microsoft. But High Dividend Yield holds 480 stocks, more than double the number in Dividend Appreciation. And its yield is a percentage point higher.

With this ETF, yield matters most. The stock-picking process starts by looking at U.S. companies (excluding REITs and MLPs) that are expected to pay a dividend over the next 12 months and then takes the highest-yielding stocks and weights them by market value. The result is a portfolio of large-company stocks with a value tilt. High Yield Dividend outpaced the S&P 500 over the past five years with an annualized return of 12% and did so with less volatility than the index.

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (15)

WisdomTree MidCap Dividend ETF

  • Share price: 86.27Current yield: 2.9%Assets: $1.7 billionExpense ratio: 0.38%Top five holdings: Oneok, Mattel, Frontier Communications, Centerpoint Energy, Coach

WisdomTree creates a proprietary index for each of its ETFs. Its so-called smart-beta, or enhanced, index funds tweak the traditional formula of indexing—weighting a basket of stocks by market value—by using other factors to determine a stock’s importance in an index.

As its name suggests, WisdomTree MidCap Dividend (DON) focuses on midsize dividend-paying U.S. firms—the index it tracks includes firms with market values of between $600 million and $13 billion. But MidCap Dividend weights its 400 stocks by the dollar amount each company is expected to pay out over the coming year. Over the past five years, the fund returned 12.4% annualized, beating iShares Russell Mid-Cap ETF (IWR), a traditional, capitalization-weighted fund, by an average of 2.4 percentage points per year. The WisdomTree ETF was less volatile to boot.

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (17)

WisdomTree SmallCap Dividend ETF

  • Share price: $69.73Current yield: 3.9%Assets: $1.3 billionExpense ratio: 0.38%Top five holdings: Targa Resources, Cal-Maine Foods, Covanta Holding, Innoviva, Regal Entertainment Group
  • SEE ALSO: 11 Great Dividend Stocks for Income Investors

Like its mid-cap sibling, WisdomTree SmallCap Dividend (DES) tracks a proprietary index of dividend-paying stocks. In this instance, though, the focus is on small companies—defined in this case as firms with market caps of less than $3.5 billion . The fund weights its 700-plus holdings by the size of the dividend each company is expected to pay in the coming year.

SmallCap Dividend has delivered more bang with less angst than its traditional index counterpart, iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM). Over the past five years, SmallCap Dividend returned 11.1% annualized, outpacing the iShares ETF by an average of 3.6 percentage points per year. Over that period, the WisdomTree ETF was 12.4% less volatile than the iShares fund.

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (19)

Nellie S. Huang

Senior Associate Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance

Nellie joined Kiplinger in August 2011 after a seven-year stint in Hong Kong. There, she worked for the Wall Street Journal Asia, where as lifestyle editor, she launched and edited Scene Asia, an online guide to food, wine, entertainment and the arts in Asia. Prior to that, she was an editor at Weekend Journal, the Friday lifestyle section of the Wall Street Journal Asia. Kiplinger isn't Nellie's first foray into personal finance: She has also worked at SmartMoney (rising from fact-checker to senior writer), and she was a senior editor at Money.

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8 Best Dividend Funds for Retirees (2024)

FAQs

What is the highest paying dividend fund? ›

Top 100 Highest Dividend Yield ETFs
SymbolNameDividend Yield
TSLPKurv Yield Premium Strategy Tesla (TSLA) ETF15.18%
JPMOYieldMax JPM Option Income Strategy ETF15.17%
KHYBKraneShares Asia Pacific High Income Bond ETF14.90%
HYGWiShares High Yield Corporate Bond BuyWrite Strategy ETF14.21%
93 more rows

What fund should a retiree invest in? ›

Money Market Funds

A money market fund is one asset that reduces risk and still delivers returns. Money market funds typically have high credit quality, short maturities and high liquidity, making them easy to sell to access cash. Good deals are abundant in money market funds these days.

What is a good portfolio for a 70 year old? ›

At age 60–69, consider a moderate portfolio (60% stock, 35% bonds, 5% cash/cash investments); 70–79, moderately conservative (40% stock, 50% bonds, 10% cash/cash investments); 80 and above, conservative (20% stock, 50% bonds, 30% cash/cash investments).

What is the safest investment with the highest return? ›

The concept of the "safest investment" can vary depending on individual perspectives and economic contexts, but generally, cash and government bonds, particularly U.S. Treasury securities, are often considered among the safest investment options available. This is because there is minimal risk of loss.

Are high dividend funds worth it? ›

Stocks and mutual funds that distribute dividends are generally on sound financial ground, but not always. Stocks that pay dividends typically provide stability to a portfolio but may not outperform high-quality growth stocks.

Which is the best monthly dividend mutual fund? ›

List of Dividend Yield Mutual Funds in India
Fund NameCategory1Y Returns
Aditya Birla Sun Life Dividend Yield FundEquity47.4%
LIC MFDividend Yield FundEquity51.8%
IDBI Dividend Yield FundEquity20.5%
Sundaram Dividend Yield FundEquity42.1%
7 more rows

What is a good portfolio for a 75 year old? ›

For most retirees, investment advisors recommend low-risk asset allocations around the following proportions: Age 65 – 70: 40% – 50% of your portfolio. Age 70 – 75: 50% – 60% of your portfolio. Age 75+: 60% – 70% of your portfolio, with an emphasis on cash-like products like certificates of deposit.

What is the best mutual fund for retirees? ›

Best retirement income funds
  • Vanguard LifeStrategy Income Fund (VASIX).
  • Vanguard Target Retirement Income Fund (VTINX).
  • Fidelity Freedom Index Income Fund Investor Class (FIKFX).
  • Schwab Monthly Income Fund Income Payout (SWLRX).
  • Schwab Monthly Income Fund Flexible Payout (SWKRX).

Should a 75 year old be in the stock market? ›

But now that Americans are living longer, that formula has changed to 110 or 120 minus your age — meaning that if you're 75, you should have 35% to 45% of your portfolio in stocks. Using this formula, if your portfolio totals $100,000, then you should have no less than $35,000 in stocks and no more than $45,000.

How much money do most 70 year olds have? ›

According to the data, the average 70-year-old has approximately:
  • $60,000 in transaction accounts (including checking and savings)
  • $127,000 in certificate of deposit (CD) accounts.
  • $17,000 in savings bonds.
  • $43,000 in cash value life insurance.
Mar 23, 2024

What is the best portfolio for a retired person? ›

Some financial advisors recommend a mix of 60% stocks, 35% fixed income, and 5% cash when an investor is in their 60s. So, at age 55, and if you're still working and investing, you might consider that allocation or something with even more growth potential.

How much should a 70 year old have in the stock market? ›

If you're 70, you should keep 30% of your portfolio in stocks. However, with Americans living longer and longer, many financial planners are now recommending that the rule should be closer to 110 or 120 minus your age.

How to get 10% return on investment? ›

Investments That Can Potentially Return 10% or More
  1. Stocks.
  2. Real Estate.
  3. Private Credit.
  4. Junk Bonds.
  5. Index Funds.
  6. Buying a Business.
  7. High-End Art or Other Collectables.
Sep 17, 2023

What Vanguard fund is best for retirees? ›

The 7 Best Vanguard Funds for Retirement
Vanguard FundExpense Ratio
Vanguard Emerging Markets Stock Index Fund Admiral Shares (VEMAX)0.14%
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Admiral Shares (VTSAX)0.04%
Vanguard Explorer Fund Investor Shares (VEXPX)0.45%
Vanguard Long-Term Treasury Index Fund Admiral Shares (VLGSX)0.07%
3 more rows
Mar 14, 2024

What is a reasonable rate of return after retirement? ›

Generating sufficient retirement income means planning ahead of time but being able to adapt to evolving circ*mstances. As a result, keeping a realistic rate of return in mind can help you aim for a defined target. Many consider a conservative rate of return in retirement 10% or less because of historical returns.

What is the best dividend portfolio? ›

15 Best Dividend Stocks to Buy for 2024
StockDividend yield
Pfizer Inc. (PFE)6.6%
Coca-Cola Co. (KO)3.3%
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)3.4%
Prologis Inc. (PLD)3.7%
11 more rows
Apr 19, 2024

Which dividend king has the highest yield? ›

3 Highest Yielding Dividend Kings To Buy and Hold Forever
  • 3M Company (MMM) Since 2022, 3M tends to float to the top when I check the highest-yielding dividend stocks. ...
  • Universal Corporation (UVV) ...
  • Altria Group (MO) ...
  • Bonus: Leggett & Platt (LEG)
Mar 27, 2024

Who is the best dividend investor of all time? ›

Warren Buffett is widely considered the greatest investor of all time, and much of his investment strategy relies on collecting dividend payments.

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