The Top High Yield ETFs Every Retiree Should Own
24/7 Wall St.
(24/7 Wall St.)
Quick Read
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iShares Core Dividend Growth (DGRO) yields 2.04% and gained 19.51%. SPDR S&P 500 High Dividend (SPYD) yields 4.55%, up 10.08% YTD. iShares Preferred and Income Securities (PFF) yields 6.21%. Vanguard International High Dividend Yield (VYMI) yields 3.49%, up 38.84%.
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Dividend ETFs provide growing income streams that outpace inflation, addressing retirement needs that Treasury bonds at current 4.06% yields cannot meet.
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Retirement income planning used to be simple: buy bonds, collect coupons, live on the interest. With the 10-year Treasury sitting at 4.06% and the Fed funds rate at 3.75%, government bonds do offer a reasonable baseline. But for retirees who need their income to grow alongside inflation, or who want meaningful yield without locking up capital for decades, dividend-focused ETFs can fill gaps that Treasuries simply cannot. The four funds below each serve a distinct purpose in a retirement income portfolio, and understanding those differences is what makes them useful.
DGRO: The Long Game on Income Growth
The iShares Core Dividend Growth ETF is not the highest-yielding fund on this list, and that is intentional. DGRO’s strategy screens for companies with a consistent record of raising their dividends, not just paying them. The result is a fund that currently yields 2.04%, which looks modest compared to alternatives, but the payout has been climbing steadily since inception. The quarterly dividend reached $0.447 in Q4 2025, up from $0.273 in Q4 2020. That kind of compounding income matters when inflation keeps eroding purchasing power.
The portfolio is genuinely diversified across the economy, with 18.6% in financials, 17.4% in healthcare, and 14% in technology. Top holdings include names like Johnson & Johnson, Procter & Gamble, and Exxon Mobil, all companies with decades of dividend-raising history. The expense ratio is just 0.08%, making it one of the cheapest ways to access a dividend-growth strategy.
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The tradeoff is patience. Retirees who need maximum income today will find DGRO underwhelming in the short term. This fund rewards those with a longer time horizon who want their income stream to grow rather than stagnate. Over the past year, the fund’s price has risen 19.51%, which adds total return context beyond the dividend alone.
SPYD: Maximum Yield From the S&P 500’s Biggest Payers
The SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 High Dividend ETF takes a different approach: it simply owns the 80 highest-yielding stocks in the S&P 500, equal-weighted. That mechanical simplicity produces a current yield of 4.08%, double DGRO’s payout. For a retiree drawing income today, that gap is real money.
The equal-weight structure means no single company dominates the portfolio. The sector mix skews heavily toward consumer staples, utilities, and real estate, the traditional homes of high yield, with consumer staples alone at 17.6% and technology representing just 2.3%. REITs like Realty Income and Simon Property Group are prominent holdings. This tilt toward defensive, income-heavy sectors is precisely what drives the fund’s elevated yield, but it also means SPYD moves differently than the broader market.
SPYD pays quarterly, and the dividends do fluctuate. The Q4 2025 payment was $0.549 while Q1 2025 came in at $0.419, so retirees should budget around an average rather than expecting a flat check. The expense ratio of 0.07% keeps costs minimal. Year-to-date through early March 2026, SPYD is up 10.08%, outpacing DGRO over the same period, though its longer-term total return trails the dividend growth fund.
The concentrated sector bet is the caveat here. When utilities and real estate struggle, SPYD feels it more acutely than a broader fund. Retirees who already hold significant real estate or utility exposure should factor that overlap in before adding SPYD.
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PFF: Monthly Income From the Preferred Stock Market
Preferred stocks occupy a unique position in the capital structure, sitting above common equity but below bonds in the event of a company failure. They typically pay fixed or floating dividends at rates well above what common shares offer, and they trade on exchanges like regular stocks. The iShares Preferred and Income Securities ETF gives retirees access to this market in a single, diversified package.
The fund’s yield of 6.21% is the highest on this list, and crucially, it distributes monthly. In 2025, monthly payments consistently ranged from $0.160 to $0.177 per share. For retirees managing monthly expenses, that predictability is valuable. PFF has been paying distributions without interruption for 18+ years, through multiple market cycles.
The fund’s holdings are heavily concentrated in financial sector preferred shares, primarily from large banks and insurance companies. That concentration is both a feature and a risk. When banks are well-capitalized and credit conditions are stable, preferred dividends flow reliably. When credit conditions tighten, preferred shares can reprice quickly. PFF’s price appreciation over five years has been modest at 11.65%, which reflects the income-first nature of preferred stocks. Retirees should think of PFF as a yield vehicle, not a growth vehicle.
VYMI: International Dividends as a Portfolio Diversifier
Most retirees build their income portfolios almost entirely in U.S. stocks. The Vanguard International High Dividend Yield ETF makes the case for looking beyond domestic borders. The fund tracks high-dividend-paying companies outside the U.S. and currently yields 3.3%, backed by a portfolio of well-known multinationals: Roche, Nestle, HSBC, Novartis, Royal Bank of Canada, Shell, and Toyota, among hundreds of others.
The geographic spread is genuine. Holdings span Switzerland, the UK, Japan, Australia, Spain, Germany, France, and Canada, among other markets. That breadth means VYMI does not move in lockstep with U.S. equities, which can smooth out portfolio volatility during periods when domestic markets are under pressure.
VYMI pays quarterly, with dividends varying across the year. The Q2 payment tends to be the largest, reaching $1.076 per share in mid-2025, while Q1 and Q3 payments are more modest. Over the past year, the fund has returned just shy of 30% on a price basis, driven in part by dollar weakness and strong performance from European and Asian equities. The expense ratio of 0.07% is extremely low for international exposure.
The tradeoffs are currency risk and the inherent complexity of international markets. Dividends from foreign companies are often subject to withholding taxes that can reduce the net yield in taxable accounts. Retirees holding VYMI in a tax-advantaged account can sidestep some of that friction.
Choosing the Right Fund for Your Situation
These four funds serve distinct roles in the dividend ETF landscape. DGRO is structured around dividend growth, with a lower current yield and a record of rising payouts. SPYD targets the highest-yielding names in the S&P 500, producing a higher current yield with more sector concentration. PFF focuses on preferred stocks, offering the highest yield on this list with monthly distributions and significant financial sector exposure. VYMI provides access to high-dividend international equities, adding geographic diversification and currency exposure. Each fund carries its own risk profile, and investors should consult a financial advisor before making any portfolio decisions.
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