At the 37% top federal bracket, a portfolio throwing off $60,000 in non-qualified dividend income hands the IRS $22,200 every April, before state taxes and before the 3.8% net investment income tax (NIIT) surtax that also applies at this income level. That is the cost of holding REITs, BDCs and other ordinary-income dividend payers in a taxable account when your marginal rate sits at the top of the schedule.
This article assumes married filing jointly, where the 37% bracket kicks in above $768,700 of taxable income in 2026. The math below applies to single filers above $640,600 as well.
The Tax Delta: Roth Versus Taxable on $60,000 of Dividend Income
Run the same portfolio in both accounts and the gap is permanent. In a taxable account at 37%, $60,000 of ordinary dividend income nets $37,800. Inside a Roth, the full $60,000 stays. The annual Roth advantage is $22,200. Over ten years with no growth or reinvestment, that is $222,000 the IRS does not touch.
The portfolio that produces this income is built on five names. The two ordinary-income payers do the heavy lifting on the Roth advantage. The three qualified-dividend Dividend Kings round out the income stream.
- Realty Income (NYSE:O | O Price Prediction): yields 5% with an annualized dividend of $3.234. As a REIT, every monthly distribution is ordinary income, making it a top-tier Roth candidate. The company just paid its 670th consecutive monthly dividend.
- Main Street Capital (NYSE:MAIN): yields 6% before supplementals, with a regular $0.26 monthly dividend plus a $0.30 quarterly supplemental. BDC distributions are taxed as ordinary income, so this is the textbook case for Roth placement.
- Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ): yields 2%, just raised the quarterly to $1.34. Qualified dividends, so the Roth benefit is smaller, but still meaningful at 37%.
- Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG): yields 3%, with a 70-year streak of increases. Qualified payer.
- Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO): yields 3% with the quarterly recently lifted to $0.53. Qualified payer, 63rd consecutive year of raises.
The Bracket Multiplier
Same $60,000 in ordinary dividends, four different brackets. The Roth advantage scales directly with the marginal rate:
| Bracket | Tax on $60K Ordinary Dividends | Net in Taxable | Annual Roth Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22% | $13,200 | $46,800 | $13,200 |
| 24% | $14,400 | $45,600 | $14,400 |
| 32% | $19,200 | $40,800 | $19,200 |
| 37% | $22,200 | $37,800 | $22,200 |
Layer on the 3.8% NIIT at the top brackets and the taxable-account drag grows further. Even if every dollar of the $60,000 were qualified, the federal hit at this income level is still roughly $14,280 at the 20% LTCG rate plus NIIT. Holding ordinary-income payers like O and MAIN in a taxable account costs nearly $8,000 more annually than holding qualified payers would, on the same $60K of income.
The Insight Most Readers Miss
The real cost is the $22,200 reinvested every year for two decades inside a Roth. Reinvested at a conservative 5% yield, the annual delta compounds to roughly $280,000 over ten years and roughly $730,000 over 20 years. That is the permanent price tag of holding non-qualified dividend payers outside a Roth at the top bracket, before any share price appreciation enters the picture.
Realty Income trades at $59.55 after a 6% monthly pullback, and Main Street Capital sits at $51.61, both near the low end of their 52-week ranges. For top-bracket earners, the entry price matters less than the account location.
What to Do
- If you hold a BDC or REIT in a taxable account, run the bracket math on every position before your next estimated tax payment. At 37%, a five-figure rebalance can pay for itself in one tax year.
- Model the Roth conversion cost against the 10-year and 20-year income delta on O and MAIN specifically. Ordinary-income payers belong at the top of the conversion priority list, ahead of the qualified-dividend Dividend Kings.
- If your highest-yielding ordinary-income positions sit in a brokerage account while JNJ, PG, and KO sit in the Roth, the placement is backward.