The post The Portfolio That Quietly Pays For Two Cruises Every Year appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Most retirees treat cruise fares like an occasional splurge funded from cash on hand or a withdrawal from the portfolio. There is another way to frame the same expense: build an income stream that quietly pays for two trips every year, leaving the principal untouched.
The core equation is the same across every scenario. Annual cost divided by yield equals the capital required. Two mainstream cruises for a couple often cost in the neighborhood of $6,000, assuming inside or ocean-view cabins, limited onboard spending, and either driving to the departure port or finding inexpensive airfare. Two premium sailings with balcony cabins, specialty dining, shore excursions, and round-trip flights to the embarkation city often land closer to $12,000. Two luxury itineraries with suite accommodations, extensive excursions, pre-cruise hotel stays, and upgraded airfare can easily reach $20,000 or more annually.
| Annual Budget | 3.5% Yield | 5% Yield | 7% Yield | 10% Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $6,000 (mainstream) | $171,000 | $120,000 | $86,000 | $60,000 |
| $12,000 (premium) | $343,000 | $240,000 | $171,000 | $120,000 |
| $20,000 (luxury) | $571,000 | $400,000 | $286,000 | $200,000 |
A $12,000 premium budget translates to $1,000 per month of needed income. At the conservative end, a couple needs roughly $343,000 working. At the aggressive end, $120,000 is enough, with caveats covered below.
Saving separately for each cruise means watching a sinking fund, timing the booking around market levels, and second-guessing the trip when the account dips. A portfolio that produces the budget every year removes that anxiety. Bookings come from incoming dividends, not from sold shares. Realty Income (NYSE:O), nicknamed the Monthly Dividend Company, has paid 670 consecutive monthly dividends and currently distributes about $0.27 per share each month. Monthly cash maps cleanly to deposit schedules and excursion balances.
Portfolio A starts at a 3.5% yield with dividend growth around 7% a year, a rate consistent with the long-term experience of many established dividend-growth companies. Portfolio B starts at a 10% yield with no growth. Both fund $12,000 of cruises today. After ten years, Portfolio A throws off about $23,600, enough for two premium cruises plus a third shorter sailing. After twenty years, the same shares pay $46,400. Portfolio B still pays $12,000, only now $12,000 buys less.
Cruise fares rarely stay flat for long. Port fees rise, airfare fluctuates, and shore excursions tend to get more expensive over time. A retirement that lasts thirty years needs growing income, which is why a lower-yielding company with consistent dividend growth can eventually fund far more travel than a higher-yield investment whose payout never increases.
Income preservation is not the universal answer. The goal is not to die with the largest possible portfolio. The goal is to use wealth to create the life you actually want. A couple who keeps postponing desired trips, settling for shorter itineraries, or booking less comfortable cabins despite having more than enough assets may be sacrificing experiences they can never get back. In some cases, spending principal to take the cruise now, upgrade the cabin, or travel while health and mobility are still strong is the rational choice. The same logic applies to retirees whose portfolios are likely to outlast them by a wide margin. Money that is never spent cannot create memories, and the value of travel often declines faster than the account balance.
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The post The Portfolio That Quietly Pays For Two Cruises Every Year appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


