The mortgage is supposed to be the finish line. Then one day the house is paid off and another realization arrives: the property tax bill never retires. It keepsThe mortgage is supposed to be the finish line. Then one day the house is paid off and another realization arrives: the property tax bill never retires. It keeps

The Portfolio That Quietly Pays Your Property Taxes Forever

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  • Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) and dividend-growth stocks offer low initial yields but compound faster over decades to cover property taxes that never stop climbing.
  • Procter & Gamble (PG) and other blue chips beat high-yield funds long-term because property tax bills grow 4% yearly—dividend growth must keep pace or your portfolio falls behind.
  • Building a tax-funded portfolio pays off only if you own the house for 15+ years; selling soon or taxable withdrawals can destroy the math entirely.
  • 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.

The mortgage is supposed to be the finish line. Then one day the house is paid off and another realization arrives: the property tax bill never retires. It keeps showing up year after year, long after the lender is gone. A portfolio that generates enough income to cover that bill forever turns one of homeownership’s most persistent expenses into somebody else’s problem. The county still gets paid. The money just comes from your portfolio instead of your checking account.

Your House Is Paid Off. Now What?

The end of a mortgage rarely ends housing costs. Property taxes, homeowners insurance, maintenance, and HOA fees keep coming. In many ways, property taxes are the bill that never retires. They tend to rise as home values rise, and they continue whether you’re working, retired, or living in the house debt-free.

That makes them an ideal target for a dedicated income portfolio. Three bills capture the range most homeowners face: $3,000 in a low-tax state, $6,000 in a typical suburb, and $12,000 in higher-cost regions like New Jersey or parts of New York. The question is simple: how much capital does it take to make those bills disappear from your household budget forever?

The Capital Required, Tier by Tier

Annual tax divided by yield equals capital required.

Annual Property Tax 3.5% yield 5% yield 7% yield 10% yield
$3,000 $85,700 $60,000 $42,900 $30,000
$6,000 $171,400 $120,000 $85,700 $60,000
$12,000 $342,900 $240,000 $171,400 $120,000

Unlike a mortgage, property taxes have no payoff date. The goal is not to eliminate the bill. The goal is to own enough income-producing assets that the bill effectively pays itself.

The 3.5% tier looks like dividend-growth blue chips. Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) yields roughly 2.2% after raising its quarterly payout to $1.34 in 2026, marking 64 consecutive years of increases. Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) just hit its 70th consecutive annual hike, with payments stretching back 136 years to 1890. You need the most capital upfront, but the principal appreciates while income compounds.

The 5% to 7% middle tier covers utilities and net-lease REITs. Duke Energy (NYSE:DUK) pays a 3.4% yield on its $4.24 annual dividend with a 5% to 7% long-term EPS growth target through 2030. Realty Income yields about 5.2%, having paid 670 consecutive monthly dividends and lifted the distribution 114 quarters in a row. Growth slows, but cash arrives monthly.

The 8% to 10%+ aggressive tier shifts to business development companies. Main Street Capital (NYSE:MAIN) yields nearly 5.9% on the regular monthly $0.26 distribution, and adds a $0.30 supplemental dividend each quarter. The 10% headline yield exists in leveraged covered-call funds and mortgage REITs, but distributions can be cut and principal often erodes.

Property Taxes Do Not Retire When You Do

A $6,000 property tax bill growing 4% annually becomes roughly $8,900 in 10 years and more than $13,000 in 20 years. A flat 10% yield portfolio that nailed the starting bill quietly falls behind. The 3.5% tier, paired with dividend growth, often wins on a long horizon.

Dividend Growth Versus High Yield

Portfolio A: $171,400 yielding 3.5% with 7% annual dividend growth covers the $6,000 tax bill in year one. Twenty years later, the income stream has nearly quadrupled, potentially covering not just property taxes but homeowners insurance and a meaningful portion of annual maintenance as well.

Portfolio B: $60,000 yielding 10% covers the same $6,000 bill today with far less capital. The tradeoff is that the income may not grow fast enough to keep pace with rising taxes, and higher-yield investments often face greater risks of distribution cuts and principal erosion.

What If Property Taxes Never Came Out of Your Pocket Again?

Imagine opening the property tax bill and realizing it no longer matters. The money is already arriving from the portfolio. No transfer from checking. No adjustment to the retirement budget. No debate about whether this year’s tax increase will force a spending cut somewhere else.

For a homeowner facing a $6,000 annual bill, eliminating that expense can feel like receiving a permanent raise. The recovered cash flow can fund travel, healthcare costs, gifts for grandchildren, charitable giving, or simply provide a wider margin of safety in retirement. That is the appeal of matching a portfolio to a specific recurring expense. Instead of replacing your entire paycheck, you eliminate one bill permanently.

The strategy works best when the bill is large enough to matter. A homeowner paying $1,500 a year in property taxes may prefer to keep the capital invested elsewhere and simply pay the bill from cash flow.

Three Moves Worth Making

  1. Pull your last three property tax bills and project a realistic 4% to 5% growth rate forward 20 years before sizing the portfolio.
  2. Compare the 10-year total return of a dividend-growth holding like JNJ against a 10%-yielding fund to see the compounding gap in real numbers.
  3. Model the tax drag on each tier in your bracket, since qualified dividends, REIT distributions, and BDC payouts are taxed very differently.

Most retirees focus on replacing their paycheck. An equally useful goal is replacing individual bills. Property taxes are one of the few expenses that almost never disappear. Building a portfolio that quietly pays them year after year may not be glamorous, but it can create the kind of financial freedom that feels surprisingly close to a raise.

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The post The Portfolio That Quietly Pays Your Property Taxes Forever appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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