4 Dividend ETFs That Could Fund an $1,800-a-Month Golf Habit

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By Drew Wood Published

Quick Read

  • JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPI) and three peers can generate $21,600 yearly from a $300,000 portfolio by blending covered-call income with dividend growth.

  • These four ETFs chase 7.2% yield, but covered-call funds like JEPI trade long-term growth for immediate payouts that may not keep pace with inflation.

  • Retirees chasing yield alone miss the compounding math: dividend growers double income in nine years while flat distributions stay flat or shrink.

  • If you're focused on picking the right stocks and ETFs you may be missing the bigger picture: retirement income. That is exactly what The Definitive Guide to Retirement Income was created to solve, and it's free today. Read more here
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4 Dividend ETFs That Could Fund an $1,800-a-Month Golf Habit

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Generating $1,800 per month from a $300,000 portfolio requires a blended yield of roughly 7.2%, enough to produce about $21,600 annually for golf expenses like memberships, greens fees, equipment, travel rounds, and clubhouse spending.

For most retirees, that income works best as a lifestyle supplement alongside Social Security or pension income rather than a full salary replacement. The challenge is that the 10-year Treasury currently yields around 4.6%, meaning investors must accept additional equity risk and volatility to push portfolio income into the 7% range. However, it is achievable with a four-ETF portfolio that mixes covered-call income, low-volatility dividends, and dividend growth. The 10-year Treasury pays about 4.6% today, so 7.2% is a real risk premium. You earn it by accepting equity volatility and, in some funds, principal erosion. Here is how the math breaks at each yield tier.

What $300,000 Buys at Each Yield Tier

Conservative tier (3% to 4%). Broad dividend-growth funds and large-cap dividend payers sit here. $21,600 divided by 0.035 equals roughly $617,000 of capital required. On $300,000, this tier alone produces about $9,000 to $12,000 a year, well short of the target. The upside: durable principal and rising payouts.

At the moderate tier (5% to 7%), covered-call equity ETFs, REIT funds, and high-dividend equity baskets cluster here. $21,600 divided by 0.07 equals about $309,000, so this tier is the natural home for a $300K portfolio. Income gets close to the target, with the tradeoff that dividend growth slows and some strategies cap upside.

Aggressive tier (8% to 14%). Leveraged covered-call funds, BDC ETFs, and mortgage REITs. $21,600 divided by 0.12 equals roughly $180,000 in capital. You hit income easily, but principal erosion is common and distributions are not guaranteed.

The Four-ETF Blend

Splitting $300,000 across four funds, each playing a different role, lets you target the 7.2% blend without parking everything in the riskiest tier.

  1. $100,000 in JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA:JEPI). JEPI writes covered calls on an S&P 500 equity sleeve and distributes monthly. Recent monthly payouts have run between $0.34 and $0.45, putting the trailing yield around 8% on a $56 share price. Expense ratio is 0.35%.
  2. $100,000 in JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (NASDAQ:JEPQ). Same covered-call mechanics, applied to a Nasdaq-100-flavored book heavy on NVIDIA, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon. JEPQ has returned about 30% over the past year while paying a typical 9% to 10% distribution yield. Expense ratio is 0.35%.
  3. $50,000 in Invesco S&P 500 High Dividend Low Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA:SPHD | SPHD Price Prediction). SPHD screens for the 50 highest-yielding S&P 500 names with the lowest realized volatility. The fund is up about 7% year to date and typically yields in the mid 4% range. Its job in the blend is income stability when covered-call funds drift.
  4. $50,000 in Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA:SCHD). SCHD’s $71.6 billion portfolio leans into Bristol-Myers, Merck, ConocoPhillips, Lockheed Martin, and Chevron. Trailing yield runs near 3.2% at the current $33 share price, with a 0.06% expense ratio. This sleeve compounds.

That mix produces roughly $8,000 from JEPI, $9,500 from JEPQ, $2,250 from SPHD, and $1,600 from SCHD, landing near the $21,600 target.

Why ETFs Beat a Single Dividend Stock

An investor could chase yield with one name. Cboe Global Markets (BATS:CBOE) pays a $0.72 quarterly dividend, or $2.88 a year. At a 0.78% yield, $300,000 generates only about $8,640. Roughly 5% to 10% of dividend payers cut their payout in any given year, a single-name risk that diversified ETFs absorb across hundreds of holdings.

The Compounding Catch

Covered-call ETFs often sacrifice long-term growth in exchange for higher current yield. JEPI has delivered more modest price appreciation over the past year compared to SCHD, which has historically paired lower yield with stronger long-term capital growth.

That tradeoff matters over retirement timelines. A dividend-growth fund increasing its payout by 8% annually doubles its income stream in roughly nine years, while a flat 10% distribution can stagnate or gradually lose purchasing power. Keeping funds like SCHD and SPHD in the portfolio helps create an income base that can continue growing rather than merely maintaining current payouts.

Here’s the Plan

Three actions move this from theory to plan:

  • Calculate your real annual spending. If you need $1,400 a month rather than $1,800, the required yield drops to roughly 5.6% and the portfolio gets safer.
  • Run the tax math. Covered-call distributions are mostly ordinary income; hold JEPI and JEPQ inside an IRA when possible and keep SCHD’s qualified dividends in taxable accounts.
  • Rebalance annually. With the VIX near 17, covered-call premiums are stable but not elevated. Trim the sleeve that runs hot and refill the one that lagged.

Lifestyle Money That Sustains Itself

Golf is one of those hobbies that quietly expands to fill whatever budget is available, especially once memberships, travel rounds, equipment upgrades, and weekly play enter the picture. A carefully structured dividend portfolio can help absorb those recurring costs without forcing retirees to constantly sell shares or dip into principal. The key is balancing current income with enough long-term growth that the portfolio can continue funding tee times years down the road, even as costs rise.

Photo of Drew Wood
About the Author Drew Wood →

Drew Wood has edited or ghostwritten 8 books and published over 1,000 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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