3 Dividend Aristocrat ETFs to Buy Before 2026 Markets Shift

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By David Beren Published

Quick Read

  • ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF (NOBL) requires 25+ consecutive years of dividend increases, holds 75+ equal-weighted positions with heavy Consumer Staples (23%) and Industrials (19%) exposure, and has delivered quarterly dividends growing from $0.134 in 2013 to $0.661 in 2025. Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (VYM) tracks current yield with 560+ holdings, a 0.04% expense ratio, and $88.7B in assets, with quarterly distributions rising from $0.175 in 2006 to $0.862 in March 2026. WisdomTree U.S. Quality Dividend Growth Fund (DGRW) screens for earnings growth and return on equity alongside dividend history, holds 25% Technology exposure including 5% each in Apple and NVIDIA, and posted 10-year price returns of 258%.

  • With Treasury yields at 4.30% and the Fed Funds rate at 3.75%, these three ETFs each address the challenge of competing with risk-free alternatives through distinct screening methodologies: NOBL prioritizes multi-decade payout discipline, VYM emphasizes scale and low costs, and DGRW combines dividend growth with quality earnings power and technology exposure.

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3 Dividend Aristocrat ETFs to Buy Before 2026 Markets Shift

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Dividend growth investing rewards patience like few other strategies. The income stream compounds year after year, and the companies behind those dividends tend to be high-quality and structurally durable.

With the Fed Funds rate at 3.75% and the 10-year Treasury yielding around 4.30%, dividend-focused equity funds must now compete against risk-free alternatives that offer meaningful real yields. The three ETFs below each take a different approach to this challenge. They reflect distinct portfolio philosophies and offer different interpretations of what “dividend growth” actually means in practice.

NOBL: The Strictest Definition of Dividend Commitment

ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF (NYSEARCA:NOBL) applies the most demanding standard of the three funds. To qualify, a company must have raised its dividend for at least 25 consecutive years, a threshold that eliminates most of the S&P 500 and concentrates the portfolio in businesses that have navigated recessions, rate cycles, and competitive disruptions without cutting their payout.

The resulting portfolio leans heavily toward Consumer Staples (23%) and Industrials (19%), sectors populated by companies with pricing power and relatively stable cash flows. Names like Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Caterpillar, and Johnson & Johnson help anchor the fund. The index uses equal weighting across 75-plus positions, so no single holding dominates. No single holding exceeds roughly 2% of the portfolio weight, which limits single-stock risk relative to market-cap-weighted alternatives.

NOBL’s dividend history illustrates the compounding effect the fund is designed to deliver. The fund paid $0.134373 per share in its first distribution in December 2013. By December 2025, that quarterly figure had grown to $0.66119. The fund carries a 2.14% dividend yield and an expense ratio of 0.35%. On a price basis, NOBL has returned about 13% over the past year and roughly 151% over the past 10 years.

The tradeoff is sector concentration risk on the downside and limited technology exposure on the upside. Information Technology represents just 3% of the fund, which means NOBL participates less in tech-driven market rallies. Investors who want the strictest possible screen for dividend durability accept that constraint.

VYM: Scale and Yield at Near-Zero Cost

Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (NYSEARCA:VYM) takes a different approach entirely. Rather than requiring a multi-decade streak of dividend increases, VYM tracks the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index, which selects stocks based on current yield. The result is a much broader fund with over 560 holdings, a 2.29% dividend yield, and an expense ratio of just 0.04%.

That expense ratio is the lowest of the three funds by a wide margin, and over a 20-year holding period, the compounding effect of that cost difference is substantial. VYM also commands the group’s largest asset base, at nearly $88.7 billion, reflecting both its age (launched in November 2006) and Vanguard’s distribution reach.

The portfolio skews toward Financials, which represent 19% of the fund, followed by Technology at 15% and Healthcare at 13%. Broadcom is the largest single holding at 6%, and the only one over 4%, an unusually large position that reflects the stock’s elevated yield relative to the broader market. JPMorgan Chase, Exxon Mobil, Johnson & Johnson, and Walmart round out the top five.

VYM’s income record is long and consistent, with quarterly distributions having grown from $0.175 in 2006 to $0.8617 in the most recent quarter (March 2026). Price performance has been strong: up about 28% over the past year and nearly 199% over ten years, the best total return of the three funds over that horizon.

The caveat here is that yield-based selection does not guarantee dividend growth. A company can have a high yield because its stock price has fallen rather than because of a strong history of raising payouts. VYM’s breadth dilutes this risk, but investors focused specifically on dividend growth trajectories rather than current income levels may find NOBL’s stricter screen more aligned with their goals.

DGRW: Quality Screen Built for Long-Term Compounders

WisdomTree U.S. Quality Dividend Growth Fund (NASDAQ:DGRW) is the most growth-oriented of the three. WisdomTree screens for earnings growth and return on equity in addition to dividend growth history, which pulls the portfolio toward companies with the financial capacity to keep raising payouts rather than just those with an existing track record of doing so.

That quality screen produces a portfolio that looks distinctly different from NOBL and VYM. Information Technology accounts for 25% of the fund, with Apple at about 5%, NVIDIA also at 5%, and Microsoft at 4%.  Alphabet also appears in two share classes that together represent roughly 5% of the portfolio. This is a dividend fund that holds the largest technology companies in the world because they meet the earnings-quality and dividend-growth criteria, not in spite of them.

The income mechanics are also distinct. DGRW pays dividends monthly, and the annual total has grown from $1.20 per share in 2024 to $1.26 in 2025. The current dividend yield is 1.35%, the lowest among the three funds, but that reflects the portfolio’s growth orientation. The fund’s ten-year price return of about 258% is the highest of the group, suggesting the quality-growth combination has generated a strong total return even if the current income rate trails VYM and NOBL.

The fund carries an expense ratio of 0.28% and holds just under 200 positions. The trade-off is that heavy technology concentration makes DGRW more sensitive to tech-sector volatility than either of the other two funds. Investors who want dividend-growth exposure alongside meaningful participation in large-cap technology earnings power will find the portfolio construction here better aligned with that objective.

Choosing Between the Three

NOBL is distinguished by the purity of its dividend commitment: every holding has raised its payout for at least 25 years, and the equal-weighted structure prevents any single name from dominating the outcome. VYM offers the broadest possible high-yield exposure at the lowest possible cost, backed by a 20-year track record of income. DGRW pairs dividend growth with quality-earnings screens and carries meaningful technology concentration, alongside higher long-term total-return potential.

Photo of David Beren
About the Author David Beren →

David Beren has been a Flywheel Publishing contributor since 2022. Writing for 24/7 Wall St. since 2023, David loves to write about topics of all shapes and sizes. As a technology expert, David focuses heavily on consumer electronics brands, automobiles, and general technology. He has previously written for LifeWire, formerly About.com. As a part-time freelance writer, David’s “day job” has been working on and leading social media for multiple Fortune 100 brands. David loves the flexibility of this field and its ability to reach customers exactly where they like to spend their time. Additionally, David previously published his own blog, TmoNews.com, which reached 3 million readers in its first year. In addition to freelance and social media work, David loves to spend time with his family and children and relive the glory days of video game consoles by playing any retro game console he can get his hands on.

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