3 Real Estate ETFs Paying Over 3% That Retirees Are Using to Hedge Inflation
Real estate has historically kept pace with inflation because landlords can raise rents as prices climb, passing cost increases directly to tenants. That mechanism makes REITs one of the more intuitive inflation hedges available to retirees who need income today, not just capital preservation tomorrow. With the Consumer Price Index sitting at 327.5 as of February 2026 and the 10-year Treasury yielding around 4.3%, retirees face a narrowing window where fixed income alone covers the cost of living. Real estate ETFs that generate 3% or more in dividend income, layered on top of property appreciation, offer a different kind of answer.
Three funds stand out for combining meaningful yield with genuine inflation-linked exposure: a broad-market core REIT fund, a residential and healthcare-focused alternative, and a research-enhanced strategy from Columbia that tilts toward higher-yielding names across the REIT universe.
The Low-Cost Core: Broad REIT Exposure at Eight Basis Points
iShares Core U.S. REIT ETF (NYSEARCA:USRT) is the foundational choice for retirees who want maximum diversification across property types without paying for active management. The fund carries $3.6 billion in assets and an expense ratio of just 8 basis points, making it one of the cheapest ways to own the entire investable U.S. REIT market.
The portfolio spans every major property category. Top holdings include Welltower (NYSE:WELL) at 8.4%, Prologis (NYSE:PLD) at 7.8%, Equinix (NASDAQ:EQIX) at 6.6%, Simon Property Group (NYSE:SPG) at 4.6%, and Realty Income (NYSE:O) at 4.4%, giving the fund simultaneous exposure to healthcare facilities, industrial logistics, data centers, retail, and net-lease properties. That breadth is the point: no single subsector dominates, so the fund’s income stream reflects broad rent growth across the economy rather than a bet on one property type.
The current dividend yield is approximately 3%, which sits just at the article’s stated threshold. The fund has delivered a year-to-date return of about 8% and a one-year return of about 26%, suggesting the total return case has been strong even as the income component remains modest relative to the other funds here.
Breadth dilutes yield. Investors who want the highest possible income will find USRT’s distribution less compelling than concentrated alternatives. The fund’s inclusion of data center REITs like Equinix and Digital Realty, which tend to reinvest cash rather than distribute it, structurally limits the yield ceiling.
Residential and Healthcare: Where Rent Growth Is Structural
iShares Residential and Multisector Real Estate ETF (NYSEARCA:REZ) concentrates on the property types most directly tied to household inflation: apartments, manufactured housing, self-storage, and senior healthcare facilities. These are the sectors where rent increases track living costs most closely, because tenants renew leases annually and operators can reprice quickly.
The fund’s largest position is Welltower at 23.2% of the portfolio, a healthcare REIT that owns senior housing and medical office buildings. That concentration is intentional: healthcare real estate benefits from demographic tailwinds as the population ages, and occupancy in senior housing has been recovering toward pre-pandemic levels. Public Storage (NYSE:PSA) at 8.5%, Ventas (NYSE:VTR) at 7.7%, and Extra Space Storage (NYSE:EXR) at 5.5% round out the top holdings, creating a portfolio that leans heavily on essential-use properties where tenants have limited alternatives.
REZ carries an expense ratio of 0.48% and holds $846 million in assets. Its dividend yield is 2.4%, which falls below the article’s 3% headline threshold. Retirees focused strictly on current income may find the yield underwhelming relative to the other options here. The fund’s year-to-date return of about 4% and one-year return of nearly 16% show that total return has been solid, but the income component is lower than the fund’s inflation-hedge framing might suggest.
The concentration in Welltower is the main risk. At nearly a quarter of the portfolio, a single company’s operational performance can move the fund materially. Investors who want residential and healthcare exposure without that degree of top-heavy weighting should consider pairing REZ with a broader fund.
Columbia’s Research-Enhanced Tilt Toward Higher Yields
Columbia Research Enhanced Real Estate ETF (NYSEARCA:CRED) takes a different approach entirely. Rather than tracking a market-cap-weighted index, it uses Columbia Threadneedle’s research process to tilt the portfolio toward REITs with stronger fundamental characteristics, including valuation, quality, and income sustainability. The result is a portfolio that looks different from a passive benchmark in meaningful ways.
The fund’s dividend yield of 3.8% is the highest of the three funds here, which reflects its deliberate tilt toward income-generating names. Top holdings include Simon Property Group at 9.4%, American Tower (NYSE:AMT) at 9%, Equinix at 8.7%, Public Storage at 7.6%, and Crown Castle (NYSE:CCI) at 6.5%. The presence of tower REITs alongside traditional property owners gives the fund exposure to infrastructure-linked real estate, where contracts often include inflation escalators.
CRED launched in April 2023, so its live track record covers roughly three years. The fund has delivered a one-year return of about 16% and a year-to-date return of about 7%. Its expense ratio of 0.33% is higher than USRT’s passive fee but reasonable for a research-enhanced strategy, and its net assets of $3.3 million make it the smallest fund on this list by a wide margin. That limited scale introduces liquidity risk: bid-ask spreads can widen in volatile markets, and the fund may not attract institutional flows that stabilize pricing.
The short history and small asset base are the primary cautions. Retirees who prioritize fund longevity and deep liquidity may prefer the iShares options, even at the cost of a lower yield.
Rate Environment and What It Means for These Funds
The Fed has cut rates by 75 basis points since September 2025, bringing the federal funds rate to 3.75%. Historically, REIT prices respond positively to rate-cutting cycles because lower financing costs reduce debt service on leveraged property portfolios and make dividend yields more competitive relative to Treasuries. The 10-year Treasury yield has remained near 4.3%, which still sits above the yields offered by USRT and REZ, though CRED’s 3.8% yield narrows that gap.
Housing starts reaching 1.49 million annualized units in January 2026 signal healthy construction activity, which supports occupancy and rent growth in the residential subsectors that REZ emphasizes. New supply eventually pressures rents, but the 12-month average of roughly 1.36 million starts suggests supply additions have been measured rather than disruptive.
Choosing Between These Three
Retirees who prioritize low cost and broad diversification belong in USRT, accepting a yield near 3% in exchange for maximum property-type coverage and an 18-year track record. Those who want the highest current income and are comfortable with Columbia’s active research process should look at CRED, where the 3.8% yield is the most compelling income case, though the fund’s limited size and short history require a higher tolerance for operational risk. REZ fits investors who specifically want residential and healthcare exposure and are willing to accept a lower yield for that targeted positioning, though its concentration in Welltower warrants attention.