A rank-and-file member of Congress earns $174,000 per year. A dividend portfolio can generate the same level of income without a campaign, constituents, or a weekly commute to Washington. Unlike a salary, however, this income is tied to capital, which means the size of the portfolio matters far more than the title attached to the paycheck.
The math is straightforward. Divide the income target by the portfolio yield, and you arrive at the capital required to produce it. Replacing a congressional salary is relatively easy on paper. The more important questions involve the tradeoffs: how much risk you are willing to take, how reliable you need the income to be, and whether that income is likely to grow over time.
Slow and Steady: The 3% to 4% Lane
At a 3% yield, replacing the congressional paycheck requires about $5.8 million. At 4%, the figure drops to roughly $4.35 million. This is the territory of dividend aristocrats and broad dividend ETFs.
Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ | JNJ Price Prediction) yields 2.3% with 64 consecutive years of increases, most recently raising the quarterly payout to $1.34. Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) yields 3% and has paid a dividend every year since 1890. The Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA:SCHD) packages a basket of similar names at a 0.06% expense ratio, with top holdings including Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck, and Chevron.
The tradeoff is straightforward. You need the most capital, but the income stream grows. JNJ’s quarterly dividend has climbed from $0.49 in 2010 to $1.34 today. That is the compounding that defeats inflation.
Where REITs Earn Their Keep: 5% to 7%
Capital requirements drop hard here. A 5% yield needs about $3.48 million; a 7% yield needs about $2.49 million. This is REIT and high-dividend equity territory.
Realty Income (NYSE:O) yields 5.4%, pays monthly, and just delivered its 114th consecutive quarterly increase. Portfolio occupancy sits at about 99%, and 2026 AFFO guidance was raised to $4.41 to $4.44. The growth rate is real but modest. Realty Income’s monthly dividend moved from $0.2565 in 2024 to $0.2705 today, a steady drip rather than a curve.
Chasing Double Digits: The 8% to 12% Stretch
At 10%, the headline number works: about $1.74 million generates a congressional salary. At 12%, the figure falls to roughly $1.45 million. Business development companies dominate here.
Ares Capital (NASDAQ:ARCC) yields 10.2% on a $1.92 annual distribution, with a weighted average debt yield of 10.3% at amortized cost. Main Street Capital (NYSE:MAIN) pays a $0.26 monthly distribution plus a $0.30 supplemental each quarter.
The catch shows up in the share prices. ARCC trades at roughly 1 times book value, and the stock is down about 6% over the past year. MAIN has slipped roughly 12% year to date. The income arrives. The principal erodes.
Why Dividend Growth Changes the Equation
The most important number is not the income a portfolio produces today. It is the income it is likely to produce ten years from now. A portfolio yielding 4% with dividend growth of 7% annually can see its income stream roughly double within a decade without requiring additional capital. By contrast, a portfolio built around a static 10% yield may generate the target income immediately but offer little growth and potentially expose investors to greater principal risk.
Over time, inflation steadily reduces purchasing power. A portfolio that grows its distributions has a better chance of maintaining or increasing real income, while a portfolio that merely maintains its payout may gradually lose ground. For long retirements, income growth can be just as important as starting yield.
The After-Tax Income Advantage
Matching a congressional salary on paper is not the same as matching it after taxes. Congressional pay is taxed as ordinary income, while qualified dividends often receive more favorable federal tax treatment. As a result, two investors with identical gross income can end up with very different amounts available to spend.
That distinction also affects portfolio construction. Assets that generate ordinary income, such as many BDCs and REITs, are often more tax-efficient inside retirement accounts. Qualified-dividend payers may be better suited for taxable accounts where investors can benefit from lower tax rates. The result can be a meaningful increase in after-tax income without increasing portfolio risk or changing the overall yield.
Building the Portfolio
- Calculate your actual spending, not your salary. Per capita disposable income runs $68,359. Most retirees need to replace far less than $174,000.
- Blend the tiers. A 60/25/15 split across conservative, moderate, and aggressive can land near 5% with real growth.
- Place ordinary-income payers in tax-advantaged accounts. The 10-year Treasury near 4.5% sets a high bar; your after-tax yield is what matters.