Replacing $7,500 a month with dividends is a math problem before it is anything else. The number you need to invest depends almost entirely on the yield you chase, and each yield tier carries a different set of tradeoffs that reveal themselves only after you own the position for a decade.
Across three broad approaches, the capital required to produce $90,000 a year ranges from roughly $1 million to over $2.5 million. That gap reflects the risks accepted at each tier, and some of those risks only surface years later.
The Conservative Path: Dividend Growers Around 3% to 4%
At a blended 3.5% yield, generating $90,000 requires roughly $2,571,000 in capital ($90,000 divided by 0.035). This is the tier of dividend kings and aristocrats: healthcare, consumer staples, and diversified industrials that raise payouts every year.
Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ | JNJ Price Prediction) currently yields about 2% after a 67% one-year rally, with 64 consecutive years of increases and a fresh 3% hike in April. Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) yields near 3% and just extended its streak to 70 straight annual increases. Neither hits 3.5% alone, so this tier typically pairs blue chips with higher-yielding aristocrats, regulated utilities, and broad dividend-growth ETFs to lift the blended yield.
The tradeoff is straightforward: you tie up the most capital, but the income line grows every year without you touching it.
The Middle Ground: 5% to 7% From REITs and Hybrids
At a 6% yield, the math shrinks to $1.5 million. This is the range of net-lease REITs, preferred shares, midstream energy partnerships, and high-dividend equity funds.
Realty Income (NYSE:O), the self-styled Monthly Dividend Company, yields about 5.1% and recently paid its 670th consecutive monthly dividend. Q1 AFFO per share grew 7% year over year, and management raised 2026 guidance to $4.41 to $4.44. The stock has returned 47% over a decade, well behind the S&P 500 but with far steadier income.
The tradeoff here is real. Dividend growth slows to the low single digits, price appreciation is modest, and rate-sensitive REITs move sharply with the 10-year Treasury, which sits at almost 4.5%.
The Aggressive Reach: BDCs and Double-Digit Yields
At 9%, you need about $1 million. Business development companies dominate this tier. Ares Capital (NASDAQ:ARCC) yields roughly 10.4% on a $0.48 quarterly dividend that has held steady for six straight quarters. Main Street Capital (NYSE:MAIN) pays a $0.26 monthly base plus a $0.30 quarterly supplemental, pushing total annual payouts to roughly $4.32 per share.
The catch shows up in the fine print. ARCC absorbed $412 million in unrealized losses in Q1 and NAV per share declined. MAIN is down 10% year to date. BDC distributions are also taxed largely as ordinary income rather than qualified dividends, which materially raises the tax bill in most brackets.
Why the Slower Yield Often Wins
JNJ’s quarterly dividend was $0.66 in 2013 and is $1.34 today, roughly doubling in 13 years. That is the point dividend-growth investors are buying: the starting yield may look modest, but the income stream can become much larger if the company keeps raising the payout. Price appreciation is a separate variable, and it should not be assumed just because the dividend grew.
A 10% yield that never grows delivers $100,000 forever in nominal dollars. A 3% yield on $1 million that grows 7% annually passes $100,000 in about year 19 and keeps climbing if that growth continues. Static yield is a treadmill. Growing yield is a staircase, but only if the business can keep raising the payout.
What to Do With This
- Recalculate against your actual spending, not your salary. If retirement expenses run $6,000 a month instead of $7,500, required capital drops by roughly $360,000 at a 5% yield, and the conservative tier suddenly becomes reachable.
- Pull the 10-year total return of a dividend-growth basket against a BDC or mortgage REIT basket. The gap is usually larger than the headline yield differential suggests once compounding and NAV drift are included.
- Model taxes tier by tier. Qualified dividends from JNJ and PG cap at 20% federal for most investors, while REIT and BDC distributions are taxed as ordinary income, which under the 2026 brackets tops out at 37%.
The Yield Solves the Math, Not the Risk
A $7,500 monthly dividend target can be built with about $2.57 million at 3.5%, $1.5 million at 6%, or roughly $1 million at 9%. The lower capital number looks easier, but it usually comes with more credit risk, rate sensitivity, tax drag, or distribution risk. The question is not which yield gets you to $90,000 fastest. It is which income stream is most likely to still be there ten years from now.
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