The post The Retiree Who Chose $65,000 Instead of $120,000 and Ended Up Richer appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Two retirees walk into retirement with the same amount of money. One builds a portfolio that pays $120,000 a year but barely grows. The other settles for $65,000 a year and focuses on dividend growth. At first glance, the first retiree appears to have won. Twenty-five years later, the second retiree may have collected more income, maintained more purchasing power, and preserved more wealth.
This is the calculation most income investors never perform. They compare today’s yield and stop there. The real question is what that income stream will look like ten, twenty, or twenty-five years from now.
Replacing income through dividends comes down to one equation: income divided by yield equals capital. At a conservative 3.5% yield, $65,000 divided by 0.035 equals roughly $1,857,000. At 7%, you need about $928,571. At 12%, just $541,667. Smaller checks need smaller portfolios. That is the seduction.
The conservative tier (3% to 4%) is built from dividend growth blue chips. Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) currently yields about 2.3% with 64 consecutive years of dividend increases. Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) yields roughly 3% and just notched its 70th consecutive annual increase. Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) pays about 2.7%. Home Depot (NYSE:HD) yields near 2.2%. AbbVie (NYSE:ABBV) sits at about 3%, rounding out the dividend grower bench.
The moderate tier (5% to 7%) comes from covered call ETFs, preferred share funds, REITs, and high-dividend equity funds. Income roughly doubles. Dividend growth slows or stalls.
The aggressive tier (8% to 14%) is mortgage REITs, BDCs, leveraged option-income funds, and high-yield bond funds. The check is huge. The principal often erodes.
A 65-year-old today can reasonably expect retirement to last 25 to 30 years. During that time, healthcare costs, insurance premiums, property taxes, and everyday living expenses are all likely to rise. Inflation may seem modest from year to year, but its cumulative effect is powerful. A flat $120,000 income stream can feel generous at the start of retirement and surprisingly tight decades later. Without growth, even a six-figure income slowly loses purchasing power.
Look at what JNJ paid its shareholders. In 1999, the quarterly dividend was $0.25. In Q1 2026, it was $1.34. P&G ran from a $0.32 quarterly payment in 1999 to about $1.09 in Q2 2026. Home Depot went from $0.04 per share in 2000 to $2.33 in 2026. Coca-Cola climbed from $0.16 quarterly in 1999 to $0.53 in 2026.
A 7% income growth rate doubles the check in roughly 10 years. Run it on the $65,000 starting point:
Capital appreciation tells the same story. JNJ returned about 164% over ten years. Home Depot returned about 205%. AbbVie delivered about 444% over the same span about 805%. High-yield mortgage REITs and option-income funds, over the same span, frequently lost NAV.
The counterargument matters. If you are 80, in poor health, or need more income than a conservative dividend-growth portfolio can provide, current yield may be the better choice. Time is the deciding variable. A 20-year retirement gives dividend growth time to compound. A 5-year horizon often favors the larger check today. For shorter-horizon retirees, Treasury yields also provide meaningful competition, offering a benchmark for what can be earned with substantially less risk.
The retiree who picked $65,000 chose patience. She let compounding do work the high-yield investor traded away on day one.
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The post The Retiree Who Chose $65,000 Instead of $120,000 and Ended Up Richer appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

