Your Dividend Yield Isn’t Your Income: What You Really Keep After Taxes

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By Drew Wood Published

Quick Read

  • Two retirees with identical $2M portfolios pulling $100K in dividends can take home $87K versus $66K based purely on income tax classification.

  • After-tax, a $10,000 payout nets over $9,000 from EPD's MLP distributions but only ~$6,800 from ARCC's BDC income, exposing how misleading headline yields are.

  • Crossing the $109,000 MAGI threshold triggers IRMAA surcharges costing ~$1,150 per spouse annually, and it is worth noting that muni bond interest counts toward that limit while MLP return-of-capital does not.

  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

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Your Dividend Yield Isn’t Your Income: What You Really Keep After Taxes

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Two retirees can both pull $100,000 from $2 million income portfolios and still land in very different places after tax. If one stream is mostly qualified dividends and the other is mostly ordinary income, the first retiree may keep about $79,000 after a 15% federal qualified-dividend rate and 6% state tax. The second may keep about $70,000 after a 24% federal ordinary-income rate and 6% state tax.

That gap is tax classification. The yield shows up on the brokerage screen. The tax character shows up later, when the dividend lands on a 1099-DIV, K-1, or Medicare premium notice.

The Four Buckets Every Dividend Dollar Falls Into

Income investors commonly run into four very different tax categories, each with its own rules:

  1. Qualified dividends from U.S. corporations held long enough: taxed at long-term capital gains rates of 0%, 15%, or 20%.
  2. Ordinary income distributions from REITs and BDCs: generally taxed at marginal income-tax rates up to 37% federal. Qualified REIT dividends may also qualify for the 20% Section 199A deduction, but BDC dividends generally do not get that same break.
  3. Tax-exempt interest from municipal bonds: generally federal-tax-free, and often state-tax-free when the bonds are issued in your home state, though fund holdings and state rules matter.
  4. Return of capital from MLPs: generally tax-deferred because it reduces your basis, with taxes due when units are sold. Part of the gain may be taxed as ordinary income because of depreciation recapture, and the rest may be capital gain.

That is why two identical yields can produce very different spendable income. A qualified dividend can be taxed at long-term capital-gains rates. A nonqualified dividend is generally taxed as ordinary income. The difference is simple in concept, but expensive in practice.

Five Income Streams, Five Different Take-Home Numbers

Assume a married couple in the 24% federal bracket with a 6% state tax rate, and ignore the 3.8% net investment income tax for simplicity. Here is what a $10,000 annual payout can look like after tax across five common income vehicles.

Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ | JNJ Price Prediction) pays a qualified dividend, with a current annualized payout of $5.36 after its 2026 increase to $1.34 quarterly. At a 15% federal qualified-dividend rate plus 6% state tax, a $10,000 qualified-dividend payout leaves roughly $7,900 before any NIIT. J&J has raised its dividend for 64 consecutive years.

Realty Income (NYSE:O) yields about 5.2% with a recent monthly dividend of $0.271 per share. REIT distributions are generally ordinary income, but qualified REIT dividends may receive the 20% Section 199A deduction. If the full $10,000 qualifies for that deduction, a 24% federal bracket and 6% state tax would leave about $7,480, not $7,000.

Ares Capital (NASDAQ:ARCC), the largest publicly traded BDC by market capitalization as of March 31, 2026, declared a $0.48 quarterly dividend for the second quarter of 2026. BDC distributions are generally taxed as ordinary income, so a $10,000 payout would leave about $7,000 after a 24% federal tax and 6% state tax, before any NIIT.

Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE:EPD) can be powerful on a tax-adjusted basis. The MLP’s 2026 distribution rate is $2.20 per unit annualized, and Enterprise reports 27 consecutive years of distribution growth. Much of an MLP distribution is often tax-deferred return of capital that reduces basis, so current-year take-home can be high. The tradeoff is K-1 paperwork, basis tracking, and potential ordinary-income recapture when units are sold.

iShares National Muni Bond ETF (NYSEARCA:MUB) had a 30-day SEC yield of 3.34%, a 12-month trailing yield of 3.16%, and a 0.05% expense ratio in late June 2026. For an investor facing a combined 30% federal-and-state tax rate, a 3.34% federally tax-exempt yield equals about 4.77% on a taxable-equivalent basis, before considering state tax treatment or AMT exposure.

The IRMAA Cliff That Quietly Costs Retirees Thousands

Cross $109,000 in MAGI as a single filer (or $218,000 joint), and your Medicare Part B premium jumps from $202.90 to $284.10 a month, plus a Part D surcharge of $14.50. That is roughly $1,150 a year per spouse, triggered by a single dollar over the line. Municipal bond interest, while federally exempt, still counts toward MAGI for IRMAA. Return-of-capital from EPD does not.

Inflation Is the Other Tax

Headline PCE inflation reached 4.1% year over year in May 2026, while the 2026 Social Security COLA came in at 2.8%. A flat 10% BDC distribution loses purchasing power whenever inflation is positive. A 2% qualified dividend compounding at 6% would take about 28 years to reach a 10% yield on cost, so dividend growth helps, but it does not “catch” a 10% starting yield within a decade.

Three Moves That Actually Change Take-Home

  1. Asset-locate by tax class. BDCs and REITs often fit better inside retirement accounts because much of their income is taxed as ordinary income in taxable accounts. Qualified-dividend payers like J&J can be attractive in taxable accounts when the investor qualifies for the 15% or 0% qualified-dividend rate. MLPs are often better suited to taxable accounts because retirement-account ownership can create UBTI concerns and may waste some of the tax deferral.

  2. Run the tax-equivalent yield on munis before dismissing them. In high-tax states like California, New York, or New Jersey, an in-state muni can beat a higher-yielding taxable bond on a net basis, but the answer depends on the investor’s federal bracket, state bracket, fund holdings, AMT exposure, and whether the bond income affects IRMAA.

  3. Model your MAGI against IRMAA thresholds. A Roth conversion in a low-income year can reduce future required distributions, but the conversion itself raises MAGI in the year it is done. A deliberate shift from ordinary-income distributions to qualified dividends may also help, but qualified dividends still count in AGI and can still affect IRMAA.

The Number That Actually Funds Retirement

The headline yield is the marketing number. The after-tax, after-IRMAA, after-inflation number is the one that funds the grocery bill. In retirement, the best income stream is not always the largest one on paper. It is the one that survives taxes, Medicare thresholds, and inflation with the most spendable cash left over.

Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.

Photo of Drew Wood
About the Author Drew Wood →

Drew Wood has edited or ghostwritten nine books and published more than 1,500 articles on investing, business, politics, travel, world cultures, wildlife, and earth science. He holds a doctorate and four master's degrees and has nearly 30 years of college teaching experience. His travels have taken him to 25 countries, including three years living in Ukraine.

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