This Portfolio Lets You Earn More Than a Lawyer… Without Going to Law School

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By Drew Wood Published

Quick Read

  • Generating $200,000 annually from dividends requires $5.71 million at a 3.5% yield or $2 million at 10%, with higher yields carrying shakier income streams.

  • A 3.5% dividend yield growing at 8% annually doubles income to $400,000 by 2035, while a flat 10% yield loses roughly a third of purchasing power to inflation.

  • A $200,000 lawyer's real spending is often just $110,000 to $130,000 after taxes, meaningfully shrinking the capital needed to replace their income with dividends.

  • 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 major national firms, all in under three minutes. See who you match with today.

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This Portfolio Lets You Earn More Than a Lawyer… Without Going to Law School

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A legal career can eventually deliver a six-figure income, but the path is rarely passive. The median annual wage for lawyers was $151,160 in May 2024, and attorneys in higher-paid roles can clear $200,000 or more. The tradeoff is years of training, tuition, billable hours, and pressure that does not disappear when the workday ends. A dividend portfolio can aim at the same income target, but it requires a large capital base and the right kind of risk.

Use $200,000 as the working figure. It is a plausible gross-income target for a higher-earning attorney and round enough to make the portfolio math easy.

The Three Price Tags

The equation is the same in each scenario: income target divided by yield equals required capital.

  • At 3.5%, $200,000 of annual income requires about $5.71 million.
  • At 6%, the bill drops to $3.33 million.
  • At 10%, it falls to $2 million.

The smaller the capital requirement, the more pressure you usually put on yield, credit quality, leverage, or payout durability. That is the trade.

Tier One: The Slow Compounding Aristocracy

This is the home of Dividend Kings and broad dividend-growth funds, yielding 3% to 4%. Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ | JNJ Price Prediction) currently yields 2.1% after 64 consecutive years of annual increases, with the most recent payout raised to $1.34 per quarter. Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) yields 2.9% with 70 consecutive annual increases on top of unbroken dividend payments since 1890. Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) yields 2.6% and just lifted its quarterly payout to $0.53.

None of those individually needs to hit 3.5% for the portfolio to work. The tier can reach that range when dividend-growth stocks are blended with higher-yielding utilities, equity-income funds, or other quality income holdings. A blended 3.5% yield growing 7% to 8% annually doubles its income in roughly nine to 10 years without selling a share, if that growth rate persists.

Tier Two: REITs and Regulated Cash Flow

Net lease REITs, preferred shares, and high-dividend equity funds live in the 5% to 7% band. Realty Income (NYSE:O), known to shareholders as “The Monthly Dividend Company,” yields 5.2% and has paid 670 consecutive monthly dividends, raising the distribution 114 quarters in a row. The portfolio is 98.9% occupied and recycling capital into new acquisitions at 7.1% initial cash yields.

The cost of admission: dividend growth may be slower than in the best dividend-growth stocks, and share prices can be sensitive to interest rates, tenant quality, lease terms, and capital-market conditions.

Tier Three: High-Yield, High-Friction Income

Business development companies, mortgage REITs, and leveraged covered-call funds occupy the 8% to 14% tier. Main Street Capital (NYSE:MAIN), a BDC lending to lower middle-market businesses, yields 6.1% on regular distributions and adds quarterly supplementals (currently $0.30 on top of $0.26 monthly). Less disciplined BDCs and option-income funds reach 10% to 14%, but routinely return capital, cut distributions, or grind principal lower.

Context matters here: the 10-year Treasury recently yielded about 4.4%, and the federal funds target range was 3.50% to 3.75%. Any yield above 8% should be treated as compensation for added risk, whether that risk comes from credit exposure, leverage, duration, option-overwriting drag, or distribution instability.

Avoid This Compounding Trap

A 3.5% yield growing 8% a year doubles the income in about nine years. On $5.71 million, that produces about $200,000 today and roughly $400,000 after nine years if the growth rate persists. A 10% flat yield on $2 million produces $200,000 today and, if distributions hold, still $200,000 a decade later, while inflation reduces its purchasing power. Tier one aims for an income stream that grows. Tier three buys more current income with less room for disappointment.

Three Moves Before You Pick a Tier

  1. Calculate spending, not salary. A $200,000 lawyer may owe federal, state, payroll, or self-employment taxes, then route more into retirement accounts or debt repayment. Real spending can be much lower than gross compensation, and every dollar removed from the income target lowers the capital requirement.
  2. Compare 10-year total return, not yield. Pull the dividend-plus-price return of a dividend-growth ETF against a high-yield income fund over the same period. The smaller stated yield can still win if dividend growth and price appreciation more than offset the lower starting payout.

  3. Map the tax bracket. Qualified dividends from corporations such as J&J, P&G, and Coca-Cola can receive long-term capital-gains tax treatment when IRS holding-period rules are met. REIT and BDC distributions are often taxed largely as ordinary income, although REIT dividends may qualify for the 20% Section 199A deduction. The after-tax yield can matter as much as the headline yield.

The Paycheck That Keeps Practicing

The goal is not merely matching a lawyer’s salary on day one. It is a portfolio that can keep paying after taxes, inflation, market stress, and the first decade of retirement have all taken their cut. The briefcase eventually goes in the closet. The income stream still has to keep working.

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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