What a $1 Million Dividend Portfolio Actually Pays After Taxes

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By Drew Wood Updated Published

Quick Read

  • The same $1 million invested in dividends can produce four times more income depending on one decision most investors make without thinking about it. See the tax breakdown →

  • Most dividend income articles stop at the gross number, but the after-tax figure tells a completely different story about which income types actually win. Check after-tax income →

  • Chasing the highest yield on a $1 million portfolio can quietly result in nothing more than getting paid back your own principal, and most investors skip the math that makes this obvious. See the yield-chasing trap →

  • Where you live when you collect dividends may matter as much as what you invest in, yet most portfolio builders never run this calculation. Model your state taxes →

  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

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What a $1 Million Dividend Portfolio Actually Pays After Taxes

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A million dollars sounds like a fortune, but in retirement income terms, its real value depends on how you put it to work. The same $1 million dividend portfolio can produce $30,000 a year or $130,000 a year, and the IRS can take very different bites depending on whether that income comes from qualified dividends, REITs, BDCs, bonds, or option premiums. Here is what $1 million actually pays, what reaches the bank account, and where the tradeoffs show up.

The Three Yield Tiers on $1 Million

The math is mechanical. Income target divided by yield equals capital required, so on a fixed $1 million the yield decides the paycheck.

  1. Conservative (3% to 4%): Roughly $30,000 to $40,000 a year. Think broad dividend growth ETFs like Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA:SCHD), which charges a 0.06% expense ratio and holds names like Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck, ConocoPhillips, Lockheed Martin, and Chevron. Lowest income, highest principal protection, fastest dividend growth.
  2. Moderate (5% to 7%): Roughly $50,000 to $70,000. REITs like Realty Income (NYSE:O | O Price Prediction), preferred shares, and covered call funds. Realty Income currently yields about 5% and just paid its 665th consecutive monthly dividend.
  3. Aggressive (8% to 14%): Roughly $80,000 to $140,000. BDCs, mortgage REITs, leveraged covered call funds, and high-yield bond funds. Highest current income, real risk of principal erosion and distribution cuts.

For context, the 10-year Treasury yields about 4.4% and the Fed funds rate sits near 4%. Anything in the conservative tier is barely beating risk-free; the moderate tier is where real income work begins.

A Realistic $1M Moderate Portfolio

Here is a balanced moderate build on the full million:

  • SCHD: $250,000 at 3.4% = $8,500
  • JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA:JEPI): $300,000 at 8.4% = $25,200
  • Realty Income: $200,000 at 5.6% = $11,200
  • Vanguard Intermediate-Term Corporate Bond ETF (NASDAQ:VCIT): $250,000 at 4.7% = $11,750

Gross total: $56,650 a year, or about $4,721 a month. That is the headline number most dividend articles stop at. The check that hits the bank is smaller.

What the IRS Actually Takes

Not all dividend income gets taxed the same way. SCHD’s distributions are mostly qualified dividends, which receive long-term capital gains treatment at 0%, 15%, or 20%. JEPI’s payouts are mostly ordinary income because option premiums are generally taxed as short-term gains. Realty Income pays a mix of ordinary income, return of capital, and some qualified dividends, while VCIT pays bond interest taxed as ordinary income.

For a single filer, this sample portfolio produces about $14,000 in qualified dividends and $42,650 in ordinary income. After a standard deduction of roughly $16,100, taxable ordinary income falls to about $26,550, creating a federal tax bill of roughly $3,200. The qualified dividends stay under the 0% threshold, so they add no federal tax.

That leaves about $53,450 after federal tax, or roughly $4,454 a month. The punch line: a carefully structured $1 million dividend portfolio can keep about 94% of its income after federal tax. A $1 million salary, by contrast, usually keeps closer to the mid-70s.

The Growth Trap Most Yield Chasers Miss

Stretching for the aggressive tier feels obvious until you do the long math. SCHD’s quarterly dividend has climbed from $0.1217 in late 2011 to the $0.25 to $0.28 range in 2025 and 2026, and the fund’s 10-year price return is roughly 229%. Realty Income lifted its monthly payout from $0.17 in 1999 to $0.2705 in April 2026, with 113 consecutive quarterly increases. A 3.4% yield growing 8% a year doubles in roughly nine years. A flat 12% yield with no growth and occasional cuts can pay out the principal itself.

Three Things to Do Before You Build

  1. Calculate your actual annual spending, not your salary. Most retirees need to replace less than they earned.
  2. Pull the 10-year total return on a dividend growth fund and a high-yield fund side by side. The compounding gap is usually larger than the yield gap.
  3. Model the tax mix in your bracket. A Californian in the 24% federal bracket and a Floridian in the 12% bracket take home very different checks from the same gross dividend.
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About the Author Drew Wood →

Drew Wood has edited or ghostwritten 9 books and published over 1,400 articles on a wide range of topics, including business, politics, world cultures, wildlife, and earth science. Drew holds a doctorate and 4 masters degrees, and he has nearly 30 years of college teaching experience. His travels have taken him to 25 countries, including 3 years living abroad in Ukraine.

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