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Dividend investors love clean numbers. A $1 million portfolio yielding 5% generates $50,000 a year, and it is tempting to treat that figure as spendable income. In reality, federal taxes, state taxes, Medicare premiums, and inflation all take their share before those dollars reach your checking account.
Consider three retirees. Retiree A owns a $750,000 portfolio producing $37,500 annually. Retiree B owns a $1 million portfolio producing $50,000. Retiree C owns a $1.5 million portfolio producing $75,000. The yields are identical, but the amount each retiree ultimately gets to keep can look very different once taxes, healthcare costs, and inflation enter the picture.
A portfolio’s yield tells you how much income it generates, not how much income you keep. A retiree collecting $50,000 of mostly qualified dividends in a low-tax state may retain more than 90% of that income before inflation. Another retiree generating the same $50,000 from REIT distributions and bond interest while paying higher state taxes and Medicare surcharges may keep closer to 70% to 80%. Identical yields can produce a difference of thousands of dollars a year in actual spending power.
Start with Retiree B’s $50,000 of annual income. If that income comes primarily from qualified dividends and the couple files jointly, much of it may fall within favorable tax treatment after the standard deduction. Change the source of the income, however, and the picture changes quickly. REIT distributions, bond interest, and other ordinary income are generally taxed at higher rates, reducing the amount that ultimately reaches the retiree. State taxes, Medicare costs, and inflation take additional bites along the way. The result is a simple lesson: a $50,000 portfolio income stream rarely translates into $50,000 of spending power.
Identical $50,000 income streams produce wildly different keep rates depending on character. Qualified dividends from Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), currently yielding 2.2%, NextEra Energy (NYSE:NEE) at 2.7%, Duke Energy (NYSE:DUK) at 3.4%, and Verizon (NYSE:VZ) at 5.9% all get 0%, 15%, or 20% rates. Realty Income (NYSE:O) at 5.2% pays mostly non-qualified REIT distributions taxed as ordinary income, though a 20% QBI deduction softens the bite. Invesco’s investment-grade corporate bond ETF (NYSEARCA:PFIG) and the 4.5% 10-year Treasury distribute interest taxed entirely at ordinary rates. Same $50,000, different keep rate.
Many retirees focus on taxes and overlook Medicare. Part B and Part D premiums are deducted from Social Security benefits, and higher-income retirees can face additional IRMAA surcharges. A large Roth conversion, a major capital gain, or an unusually strong income year can push income above a threshold and temporarily increase Medicare costs. The result is that earning more income does not always translate into keeping more income.
Where you live affects both how much income you keep and what that income can buy. Tennessee has no state income tax, while Pennsylvania generally treats retirement income favorably. New Jersey tends to impose a heavier tax burden and a higher cost of living. As a result, the same $75,000 income stream can produce very different levels of spendable income and purchasing power depending on the retiree’s ZIP code.
Taxes and Medicare premiums reduce the income you receive. Inflation reduces what that income can buy. Even if a dividend check never changes, its purchasing power steadily erodes over time. At 2% inflation, a flat $50,000 income stream loses roughly 18% of its purchasing power over ten years. At 3%, the loss approaches 26%. At 4%, the loss reaches about one-third. Extend the timeline to twenty years and a flat income stream can lose nearly half its real value. Income that grows has a chance to keep pace. Income that stays flat gradually falls behind.
Two retirees can own portfolios with identical 5% yields and end up with very different lifestyles. Retiree B’s $50,000 income stream might remain largely intact if it comes from qualified dividends in a low-tax state. Another retiree generating the same $50,000 from REIT distributions and bond interest, while paying higher state taxes and Medicare surcharges, could keep thousands less each year. Yield is only the starting point. The figure that matters is how much income remains after taxes, healthcare costs, and inflation.
Gross income still has value. It provides a common benchmark for comparing portfolios, estimating future wealth, and evaluating estate plans. But retirees do not spend gross income. They spend what survives the deductions. Gross income is the headline number. Spendable income is the one that determines a retiree’s standard of living.
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The post How Much Of Your Dividend Income Do You Actually Get To Keep? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


