The average Social Security retirement check reached $2,081 per month as of April 2026, according to the Social Security Administration’s monthly statistical data. That figure carries the 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment that took effect in January 2026. Replacing roughly that amount with dividend income is a math problem before it is an investing problem, and the math is more straightforward than most pre-retirees expect.
Generating $2,000 a month means producing $24,000 a year in cash distributions. At a 4% yield on the blended portfolio, the required principal is $600,000. At 5%, the target falls to $480,000. At 6%, it drops to $400,000. The yield assumption sets the savings goal, and the holdings determine whether that yield is durable. Stretching for yield without checking the payout history is how income portfolios break.
The Yield Menu Available Right Now
Five widely held names show how a blended portfolio currently lines up. Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ | VZ Price Prediction) carries a 6.05% dividend yield after raising its quarterly payout to $0.7075 in 2026. Altria Group (NYSE:MO) yields 5.83% on a quarterly dividend that rose to $1.06 in 2026 from $1.02 a year earlier. Enterprise Products Partners pays 5.9% through an MLP structure that issues a K-1 tax form rather than a 1099-DIV, which matters when the holding is in a taxable account.
Realty Income (NYSE:O) yields 5.22% and pays monthly rather than quarterly, with $0.271 per share declared for June 2026. Monthly cadence is why it appears in income portfolios more often than its yield alone would suggest: Social Security arrives monthly, and household bills do too. Quarterly payers force retirees to manage cash between paydays.
Lower-yielding names anchor the other side of the trade. Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) yields just 2.56%, and AbbVie (NYSE:ABBV) pays 2.87%. Their role is dividend growth rather than current income. Coca-Cola’s quarterly payout rose from $0.51 in 2025 to $0.53 in 2026, and AbbVie’s moved from $1.64 to $1.73 per quarter over the same window. A retiree drawing income for 25 or 30 years needs the check to grow, not just to arrive.
What the Blended Portfolio Actually Produces
An equal-weight basket of these six names carries an average yield near 4.7%. This would mean that, on a $510,000 portfolio split evenly, it would produce roughly $24,000 in annual distributions, or about $2,000 per month before tax. The portfolio sizes reflect the gap between what a typical household has saved and what cash-flow replacement requires, and the BEA’s data show that gap is widening: the personal savings rate fell to 3.9% in the first quarter of 2026, down from 6.2% in early 2024.
What the Strategy Does Not Solve
The overall solution here is that dividend replacement covers the cash flow Social Security provides. This said, it does not cover the inflation indexing. The big takeaway is that Social Security’s COLA is statutory, whereas corporate dividends are at the discretion of each board.
The 2026 dividend hikes at Verizon, Altria, Coca-Cola, AbbVie, Enterprise Products, and Realty Income all cleared inflation, but no policy requires them to keep doing so. Concentration risk is the other constraint, as three of the six names yield above 5% because their underlying businesses, tobacco, telecom, and energy infrastructure, carry regulatory or secular pressures the market has priced in.
A retiree targeting $2,000 a month in dividend income needs roughly $400,000 to $600,000 deployed at yields between 4% and 6%, depending on how much capital risk is acceptable. Monthly payers like Realty Income smooth the cash-flow calendar. Lower-yielding aristocrats like Coca-Cola are included in the portfolio to preserve purchasing power over a 20-year retirement. The check Social Security writes is indexed for life. A self-built dividend stream is not, and the portfolio has to be constructed with that distinction in mind.
Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.