3 Dividend Aristocrats to Own For a Lifetime Of Passive Income

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By Vandita Jadeja Published

Quick Read

  • McDonald’s (MCD), Coca-Cola (KO), and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) offer dividend income opportunities with 49-64 years of consecutive annual payout increases.

  • A $30,000 investment across these three dividend aristocrats generates $758 in annual passive income with a blended 2.53% yield.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 stocks and Johnson & Johnson wasn't one of them. Get them here FREE.

3 Dividend Aristocrats to Own For a Lifetime Of Passive Income

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Paychecks stop. Bonuses get cut. Layoff announcements arrive without warning. Dividend checks, by contrast, keep landing in brokerage accounts on a schedule set years in advance by boards that treat the payout like a contract with shareholders. For income investors, that predictability is the whole point.

A portfolio of mature, cash-rich businesses that have raised distributions through recessions, pandemics, and rate cycles offers something earned income cannot: cash flow that does not require you to show up to work.

Dividend Aristocrats, companies with decades of uninterrupted annual increases, answer that bar with growing payouts rather than fixed coupons, plus the liquidity and optionality that rental properties and private credit funds simply cannot match. We screened our 24/7 Wall St. dividend equity research database, looking for stocks that pay massive dividends, and we found a collection of companies that, combined, can generate over $750 a year in passive annual income if you invest just $10,000 in each stock at the time of this writing.

Johnson & Johnson

  • Yield: 2.34%
  • Shares for $10,000: 43.68
  • Annual Passive Income: $234

Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ | JNJ Price Prediction) runs a diversified healthcare franchise split between Innovative Medicine and MedTech, with $96.4 billion in trailing revenue and one of only two AAA corporate credit ratings in the United States. Shares closed at $228.92 on May 18, 2026, up 55.46% over the past year.

The income case rests on a structural advantage: durable healthcare demand. U.S. healthcare spending reached $3,741.3 billion in March 2026, up $277.7 billion year over year, funding the kind of free cash flow that supports 64 consecutive years of dividend increases. The board just raised the quarterly payout to $1.34 per share, a 3.1% increase. 

Coca-Cola

  • Yield: 2.61%
  • Shares for $10,000: 123.15
  • Annual Passive Income: $261

Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) operates an asset-light concentrate model, licensing syrup to a global bottler network that absorbs the capital intensity while Atlanta collects the brand royalty. The stock closed at $81.20 after climbing 16.95% year to date, with Q1 2026 revenue of $12.47 billion, up 12.1% and organic growth of 10%.

The dividend math is built on consistency. Coca-Cola raised the quarterly payout to $0.53 per share for 2026, extending a streak that paid out $8.8 billion in 2025 and now spans 63 consecutive years of increases, qualifying KO as a Dividend King. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway remains the largest holder, alongside Vanguard and BlackRock. Management has $5.2 billion remaining on its buyback authorization, with $477 million repurchased in Q1 2026.

McDonald’s

  • Yield: 2.63%
  • Shares for $10,000: 35.40
  • Annual Passive Income: $263

McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD) is the world’s largest franchised QSR, with roughly 93% of restaurants operated by franchisees, generating high-margin royalty and rent income that drove a 46.1% operating margin in Q1 2026. Shares trade at $282.47, off 9.29% over the past year, which has actually lifted the entry yield for new buyers.

The franchise model is the structural reason behind the payout. Royalty streams convert directly to free cash flow, which funded $1.3 billion in dividends and $393 million in buybacks during Q1 2026 alone. The quarterly dividend now stands at $1.86 per share following a 5% hike, extending roughly 49 consecutive years of increases. 

Putting the Income Together

Combined, these three positions generate $758 in annual passive income on a $30,000 investment, a blended yield of 2.53%. McDonald’s contributes $263, Coca-Cola adds $261, and Johnson & Johnson rounds out the portfolio with $234.

An infographic titled '3 Dividend Aristocrats to Own For a Lifetime Of Passive Income.' It presents financial data for three companies: Johnson & Johnson, Coca-Cola, and McDonald's. For Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), the yield is 2.34%, shares for $10,000 are ~43.68, annual passive income is ~$234, and there are 64 consecutive years of dividend increases. For Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), the yield is 2.61%, shares for $10,000 are ~123.15, annual passive income is ~$261, and there are 63 consecutive years of dividend increases, making it a Dividend King. For McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), the yield is 2.63%, shares for $10,000 are ~35.40, annual passive income is ~$263, and there are ~49 consecutive years of dividend increases. A section titled 'Putting the Income Together' shows a combined annual passive income of $758 from a $30,000 investment, representing a blended yield of 2.53%. A pie chart titled 'Annual Income by Position' visually breaks down the total income: JNJ contributes $234 (navy slice), KO contributes $261 (green slice), and MCD contributes $263 (slate slice).
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The real power of an Aristocrat portfolio is the slope of the payout curve. Every one of these three has historically raised distributions faster than CPI, meaning the yield on your original cost basis compounds upward year after year while shares stay liquid enough to sell in a single click. That combination, growing income plus instant exit optionality, is what real estate and private credit cannot replicate.

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About the Author Vandita Jadeja →

Vandita Jadeja is a financial copywriter who loves to read and write about stocks. She believes in buying and holding for long term gains. Her knowledge of words and numbers helps her write clear stock analysis. She has contributed to several publications, including the Joy Wallet, Benzinga, The Motley Fool and InvestorPlace.

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