Income investors heading into July face a friendlier setup than they did just six weeks ago. The 10-year Treasury yield sits at 4%, down from a May peak of 5%, while the 2026 Social Security COLA came in at just 3%. That combination, lower risk-free rates plus a modest cost-of-living bump, pushes retirees back toward dividend equities that pay every 30 days. Income receipts on assets reached $4,281.5 billion in Q1 2026, underscoring how much Boomer cash flow now leans on portfolio income.
Below are five monthly-pay names worth researching for July. Each ticker has been verified for current price, yield, and the most recent declared dividend.
Realty Income
Realty Income (NYSE:O | O Price Prediction) is the benchmark every other monthly payer is measured against. Shares traded at $62.68 on June 30, putting the trailing yield at 5%. The board just lifted the monthly payout to $0.271 per share, payable July 15, extending a record of 667+ consecutive monthly dividends and 132 increases since the 1994 IPO.
The bull case is operational scale. Q1 AFFO came in at $1.13 per share, up 7% year over year, on revenue of $1.55 billion, beating estimates. Management raised 2026 investment volume guidance to $9.5 billion from $8.0 billion and pushed AFFO guidance to $4.41 to $4.44. Portfolio occupancy held at 99%.
Risk: Q1 included $129.3 million in impairment provisions, plus higher interest expense and FX losses on the UK book. The stock has already run 14% YTD, so chasing here means accepting tighter forward returns.
EPR Properties
EPR Properties (NYSE:EPR) is the experiential net-lease play, owning movie theaters, Topgolf venues, and ski resorts. Shares closed at $59.10 on July 3, with the monthly dividend recently raised to 31 cents per share, an annualized run rate of $3.72 and a yield of 6%.
Q1 FFOAA grew to $1.26 per share, up 6% year over year, the portfolio is 99% leased across 335 properties, and tenant rent coverage runs at 2.0x. Management raised 2026 FFOAA guidance to $5.37 to $5.53 and is deploying capital into the six Six Flags properties acquired from a $315 million portfolio deal.
Risk: EPR suspended its dividend in 2020 during COVID and again in 2008–09, so the streak of five consecutive annual increases is still rebuilding trust. Concentration is real: Topgolf, AMC, and Regal combine for 38% of revenue, and $629.6 million of debt matures in 2026.
Main Street Capital
Main Street Capital (NYSE:MAIN) is the BDC every income investor either owns or wishes they bought lower. The stock trades around $52 after a nearly 16% YTD pullback, with a base yield of 6% on the 26-cent regular monthly dividend. Layer in the 30-cent supplemental declared for June 30, the 19th consecutive quarterly supplemental, and combined yield climbs into the 6% to 8% range.
Q1 distributable net investment income was $1.00 per share, NAV ticked up to $33.46 from $33.33, and non-accruals stayed contained at 1% at fair value. MAIN has never cut its dividend since its 2007 IPO.
Risk: BDCs must distribute roughly 90% of taxable income, leaving thin cushions in credit downturns. Q1 showed a net fair value decrease of $32.6 million versus a $33.6 million gain a year earlier.
LTC Properties
LTC Properties (NYSE:LTC) owns seniors housing and skilled nursing assets, positioning it squarely on the aging-demographic tailwind. The stock trades around $39 with a yield of 6% on a 19-cent monthly dividend that has held steady through every payment in 2026.
Q1 adjusted EPS hit 48 cents versus a 40-cent estimate, beating expectations, on revenue of $95.41 million, up 58% year over year. The SHOP segment is scaling toward 45% of gross investments by year-end, and management reaffirmed 2026 Core FFO guidance of $2.75 to $2.79.
Risk: The strategic pivot into SHOP carries execution risk, and the $179.9 million Prestige Healthcare mortgage becomes prepayable starting July 2026, a near-term reinvestment overhang.
Agree Realty
Agree Realty (NYSE:ADC) is the BBB+ triple-net retail REIT that has quietly become a Boomer favorite. Shares trade around $78 for a 4% yield, and the monthly dividend was just lifted to 26 cents per share, payable July 15.
Q1 AFFO grew to $1.14 per share, up 8% year over year, on revenue of $200.81 million, up 19%. The portfolio spans 2,756 properties across all 50 states with 100% occupancy, and management is sitting on $2.3 billion in total liquidity. Analyst sentiment is constructive, with 11 Buy and 1 Strong Buy ratings against a $84.56 target.
Risk: Investment-grade tenant exposure has slipped to 65% from 68% a year ago, a small but worth-watching dilution in credit quality.
What to Watch in July
The setup favors monthly payers as long as Treasury yields keep drifting lower. CPI sat at 333.979 in May, up 1% month over month, soft enough to keep the Fed patient. Watch July dividend declarations and any commentary on 2026 reinvestment yields, particularly from EPR and LTC, where near-term debt and mortgage events could reshape the income profile.
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