Rake In More Than the Income of an Average Atlanta Metro Household With This $970,000 Portfolio

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By Drew Wood Updated Published

Quick Read

  • A blended portfolio of JEPQ, BIZD, SPYI, and PFF at a blended 8.6% yield generates roughly $83,178 annually on $970,000.

  • Covered-call funds like SPYI cap upside in bull markets and deliver flat distributions that shrink in real terms as inflation compounds annually.

  • Compare 10-year total returns over headline yields. A high-yield ETF losing 3% NAV annually trails a 3.5% dividend grower compounding at 8% within a decade.

  • Many financial professionals are salespeople paid on what they push, not whether you end up wealthier. A fiduciary is the opposite. The SEC legally requires them to put your interests first. Advisor.com's free matching tool pairs you with vetted fiduciaries from firms like Vanguard, Empower, and Edelman — in under three minutes. See who you match with today.

Rake In More Than the Income of an Average Atlanta Metro Household With This $970,000 Portfolio

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The U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey places median household income in the Atlanta metropolitan area at roughly $83,000 per year. That figure represents a working household earning regular paychecks rather than investment income. The question this article explores is how much of that income a portfolio can realistically replace through distributions alone, and what a $970,000 portfolio looks like across three very different yield strategies.

Why $970,000 Is the Right Anchor

Georgia’s per capita income is approximately $62,875, while disposable personal income averages about $55,745. With a cost-of-living index of 96.293, slightly below the national average, a household earning the metro median income can maintain a comfortable lifestyle in many parts of the state. With the 10-year Treasury yielding around 4.5% and the federal funds target range topping out near 4%, generating meaningful portfolio income has become more achievable than it was during the ultra-low-rate era. A $970,000 portfolio serves as a useful benchmark because it highlights the tradeoffs between conservative, moderate, and higher-yield approaches to replacing earned income.

Tier One: The 3% to 4% Sleep-at-Night Yield

Broad dividend-growth equity portfolios, including ETFs anchored on dividend aristocrats like ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF (NYSEARCA:NOBL), typically yield 2% to 3%. Stretching to 3.5% via large-cap value funds and high-quality REITs is reasonable.

The math: $83,000 divided by 0.035 equals roughly $2,371,000. On a $970,000 portfolio, a 3.5% yield generates only $33,950 a year. You are nowhere near $83,000, but the principal is the most likely to appreciate, and a 7% to 9% annual dividend hike rate compounds the income stream meaningfully across a 20-year retirement.

Tier Two: The 5% to 7% Hybrid Yield

Preferred shares, mortgage REITs at the conservative end, and high-dividend equity funds live here. iShares Preferred and Income Securities ETF (NASDAQ:PFF) yields in the mid-6% range, and high-yield equity funds cluster around 5% to 7%.

The math: $83,000 divided by 0.06 equals roughly $1,383,000. The $970,000 portfolio at 6% throws off $58,200 annually. Closer to the goal, but the income stream rarely grows with inflation, and preferreds can take real price hits when long-end Treasury yields spike, as they did when the 10-year recently pushed near 4.7%.

Tier Three: The 8% to 12% Maximum Income Range

This is where $970,000 actually clears $83,000. The NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF (NYSEARCA:SPYI) ran $0.5353 in May, which annualizes near $6.42 per share. Against a recent price of $54, that is roughly an 11.9% distribution yield. The fund holds $6.9 billion in net assets and carries an expense ratio of 0.68%.

An entirely SPYI portfolio of $970,000 produces roughly $115,430 per year on current distributions, well over the Atlanta median. A more diversified blend, 30% JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (NASDAQ:JEPQ) at roughly 9.5%, 25% VanEck BDC Income ETF (NYSEARCA:BIZD) at 10%, 30% SPYI at 12%, and 15% PFF at 6.5%, lands at a blended yield near 8.6%. That throws off about $83,178 on $970,000.

The Catch Most Income Investors Miss

SPYI has returned 24% over the past year and 8% year-to-date, which is excellent. Yet covered-call funds cap upside in roaring markets, and BDC distributions can be cut when credit spreads widen. A 3.5% dividend-growth portfolio compounding distributions at 8% annually doubles its income in nine years. An 11.9% yield with flat or declining distributions stays at $115,000 forever, and in real terms shrinks every year inflation runs above zero.

Three Moves to Make Before Funding the Account

  1. Run your own number rather than the median. Pull last year’s actual spending. Atlanta neighborhoods range from $35,000 in lower-income corridors to $200,000-plus in Buckhead. The capital required scales linearly with the target.
  2. Compare 10-year total returns rather than headline yields. A high-yield ETF that pays 12% but loses 3% of NAV annually trails a 3.5% yielder that grows 8% within a decade. Total return is the figure that matters.
  3. Model the tax bracket. SPYI’s option-overlay structure is designed for tax efficiency, but BDC ordinary-income distributions in a taxable account hit at your marginal rate. In Georgia’s state bracket, a Roth or traditional IRA wrapper changes the after-tax math materially.

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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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