Quick Read
Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD) carries a 0.06% expense ratio with $94.9B in assets and top weights in Qualcomm and Merck; Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) yields 2.3% on a $1.34 quarterly dividend raised from $1.30 this year, extending a 64-year streak and trading near $225 with a 0.263 beta; Realty Income (O) anchors the REIT slice at $61 per share with a 5.2% yield, Q1 2026 AFFO up 6.6% year-over-year, and 670 consecutive monthly dividends with 114 consecutive quarterly increases.
A $2.8M portfolio targeting $150,000 annual income requires a 5.4% blended yield that falls short of what dividend-growth stocks alone can deliver, necessitating a 30/25/20/15/10 split across covered-call funds, REITs, preferred shares, blue-chip dividends, and corporate bond funds to avoid aggressive high-risk income products.
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The income target is straightforward: $12,500 a month equals $150,000 a year, and the portfolio doing the work is $2.8 million. Dividing the income by the capital gives the math the whole article has to solve: a blended yield of roughly 5.4%. That number falls in the middle of the income-investing spectrum, which is why the title rules out the aggressive 8%-14% tier. The capital is large enough to avoid it.
Anchoring the Income Number to a Risk-Free Baseline
The equity math needs a benchmark first, as the 10-year Treasury yields 4.43%, near the upper end of its 12-month range of 3.93% to 4.69%. A $2.8M Treasury ladder would generate about $125,000 in interest with no equity risk, falling short of the $150,000 target by about $25,000. Closing that gap is where the tier discussion begins.
The Conservative Tier: 3% to 4% Yield
At a 3.5% blended yield, $150,000 of income requires roughly $4,285,000 in capital. At 4%, the requirement falls to $3,750,000. Both numbers exceed the $2.8M portfolio, which is the point: a pure dividend-growth allocation cannot hit $12,500 a month at this capital level.
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The tier itself is built around broad dividend-growth equity. Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA:SCHD) carries a 0.06% expense ratio and $94.9 billion in assets, with top weights in Qualcomm, Merck, Texas Instruments, UnitedHealth, and Coca-Cola.
In addition, another good holding is Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), which yields 2.3% on a $1.34 quarterly dividend, raised from $1.30 earlier this year, extending a 64-year streak. JNJ trades near $225, up about 10% year-to-date, with a beta of 0.263.
The Moderate Tier: 5% to 7% Yield
This is where $2.8M starts to work; at 5%, the required capital is $3,000,000. At 5.36%, it is $2,800,000. At 7%, only about $2,143,000.
The category includes net-lease REITs, preferred shares, covered-call equity income funds, and high-quality corporate bond funds. Realty Income (NYSE:O) anchors the REIT slice, with shares trading near $61, a dividend yield of 5.2%, and an annualized payout of $3.246 per share. Q1 2026 AFFO came in at $1.13, up 6.6% year over year, with full-year guidance raised to $4.41 to $4.44. The company has declared 670 consecutive monthly dividends and lifted the payout for 114 consecutive quarters.
A Blended Allocation That Avoids the Aggressive Tier
A representative split from the source brief: 30% covered-call equity income funds (9% to 11%), 25% REITs (4.5% to 5.5%), 20% preferred shares (5% to 6%), 15% dividend-growth blue chips (3% to 4%), and 10% high-quality corporate bond funds (5% to 6%). The blended yield lands near 5.4%, producing roughly $151,000 in year-one income with no allocation to BDCs above 12%, mortgage REITs, or leveraged covered-call products.
What Most Readers Miss About the Slow Slice
The 15% dividend-growth sleeve, only $420,000 of the $2.8M, starts at about $14,700 of annual income. Compounded at 7% dividend growth, that slice produces roughly $33,000 by year 12, eventually overtaking the covered-call slice in income contribution. With reinvestment, the brief estimates total portfolio income reaches $200,000 to $220,000 a year by year 15. The high-current-yield sleeve pays more today; the low-yield sleeve pays more later.
Three Things to Model Before Allocating
Run the qualified-dividend math. Covered-call distributions are typically a mix of ordinary income and return of capital, while blue-chip dividends are qualified and taxed at 15% to 20%. Hold the ordinary-income slices in IRA or 401(k) space and the qualified payers in taxable accounts.
Model IRMAA. $150,000 of dividend income for a couple drives Medicare premium surcharges through the two-year MAGI lookback. The 2026 federal bracket structure puts joint filers into the 24% marginal rate above $211,400, which interacts with the surcharge tiers.
Compare 10-year total returns between a dividend-growth fund yielding around 3.5% and a high-distribution covered-call fund yielding 10%. The income gap narrows or reverses once dividend growth and NAV trajectory are accounted for.
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