A $730,000 Portfolio That Pays More Than What Most Americans Earn at Work

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By Drew Wood Updated Published

Quick Read

  • The highest-yielding portfolios look the most attractive on screeners, yet there is a specific reason they can leave you poorer than a fund paying less than half their rate. See the high-yield risks →

  • One yield percentage is the exact threshold where $730,000 flips from falling short of median American wages to clearing them, and most investors guess wrong about where that line sits. See the 7% threshold →

  • Your tax bracket could silently move your effective yield by more than 100 basis points, yet most income investors never model it before committing capital. Model your tax impact →

  • A portfolio that only pays 3.5% today can outrun one paying 11%, though this is possible only if a single compounding detail works in your favor. Explore the compounding edge →

  • 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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A $730,000 Portfolio That Pays More Than What Most Americans Earn at Work

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The U.S. median wage for full-time, year-round workers sits near $51,000 a year. A portfolio of $730,000 can clear that bar, but only if the yield is set deliberately. The math is unforgiving in both directions: too conservative and the portfolio falls short, too aggressive and the income may not survive the next decade.

Here is what each yield tier looks like against that target, using two anchor names most income investors already know: Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA:SCHD) and Realty Income (NYSE:O | O Price Prediction).

The Conservative Tier: 3% to 4%

Broad dividend-equity ETFs and dividend-growth funds usually sit in this yield range. SCHD currently trades around $32 with a trailing distribution near $1.05 per share, putting its yield close to 3.4%. The fund charges 0.06% and holds a diversified basket of dividend payers led by Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck, and ConocoPhillips.

At 3.5%, $730,000 generates roughly $25,550 a year, far below the $51,000 target. Reaching median-wage income at this yield requires about $1.46 million in capital. The tradeoff is clear: more money up front for a portfolio with a history of appreciating alongside a growing payout. SCHD has returned 229% over the past 10 years on a total-return basis, which is the compounding engine behind the conservative tier.

The Moderate Tier: 5% to 7%

This is where $730,000 starts to do real work. Net-lease REITs, preferred shares, covered-call equity funds, and high-dividend equity ETFs cluster here. Realty Income trades near $63 with an annualized payout of $3.24 per share, a yield around 5%. The REIT pays monthly, has raised the dividend 133 times since its 1994 listing, and runs at 99% occupancy across retail, industrial, and gaming properties.

At a 7% blended yield, $730,000 generates $51,100 a year, or about $4,260 a month. That is the precise reason the headline number works: $51,000 divided by 0.07 equals roughly $728,500. The cost is dividend growth that slows materially compared to SCHD, and several of the strategies in this band (covered-call ETFs in particular) cap upside in strong markets.

The Aggressive Tier: 8% to 14%

Business development companies, mortgage REITs, leveraged covered-call funds, and high-yield bond funds populate this tier. At 11%, $730,000 throws off $80,300 a year. To hit the $51,000 median, an investor only needs about $464,000 in capital, which is why these vehicles dominate income-focused screeners.

The trade-off is principal erosion. Many high-yield vehicles return capital, cut distributions during credit cycles, or grind lower in price even while paying. The investor is often spending the asset rather than living off its growth. With the 10-year Treasury near 4.4%, a 12% yield implies the market is pricing in real risk.

The Compounding Detail Most Readers Miss

A 3.5% yield growing 8% annually doubles its income in roughly nine years. A static 11% yield does not. Realty Income’s payout has risen from the roughly $0.189 monthly range in 2015 to $0.2705 in May 2026, a roughly 43% increase on the same shares. An investor who bought a decade ago is now collecting a much higher yield on cost without adding capital. High-static-yield portfolios rarely produce that same compounding effect.

What To Do With This

  1. Calculate actual annual spending, not gross salary. If take-home spending is closer to $40,000, the capital target drops sharply at every tier.
  2. Compare 10-year total returns of a 3.5% dividend grower against a 10% high-yield fund. The compounding gap is usually wider than the yield gap suggests.
  3. Model the tax bill before committing. REIT distributions are taxed as ordinary income, qualified dividends are not, and the difference can move the effective yield by 100 basis points or more in a high-bracket household.

$730,000 clears the median American wage at a 7% yield. Whether it should be deployed that aggressively is a separate question, and the answer lives in the spending number, the tax bracket, and the time horizon.

Photo of Drew Wood
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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