Four tickers. One goal: $60,000 a year in income without touching a paycheck. The question is how much capital it takes to get there, and what you give up depending on how hard you push your portfolio to work.
Why the 10-Year Treasury Changes Everything
Before looking at any dividend stock, consider the baseline. The 10-year Treasury yield is currently around 4.3%, which means a risk-free government bond now pays more than it has in years. To hit $60,000 from Treasuries alone, you would need roughly $1.4 million. That is the floor. Every income strategy below competes against that number.
The four tickers covered here, Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE:EPD | EPD Price Prediction), British American Tobacco (NYSE:BTI), Verizon (NYSE:VZ), and Energy Transfer (NYSE:ET), all yield in the 5.7% to 7% range at current prices. That spread matters more than it sounds.
The Math at Three Yield Levels
At a conservative 3.5% to 4% yield, typical of broad dividend growth funds and blue-chip equities, reaching $60,000 requires roughly $1.5 million to $1.7 million. The difference is clear: the portfolio is diversified, dividends tend to grow over time, and principal is most likely to appreciate.
The four tickers in this article sit in the 5.7% to 7% moderate tier. Here the math becomes more accessible. At 6.5%, you need roughly $923,000. At 7%, it falls to approximately $857,000. That is a meaningful difference from the conservative tier. Distribution growth slows relative to pure dividend growth stocks here,, some income may not keep pace with inflation over decades, and each name carries sector-specific risk.
At the aggressive 10% to 12% yield tier, covered call funds, mortgage REITs, and leveraged income strategies bring the required capital down sharply. At 10%, you need $600,000. At 12%, it falls to $500,000. The tradeoff is severe: principal erosion is common, distributions get cut when conditions shift, and the investor is often spending down the asset rather than living off its growth.
What Each of These Four Actually Pays
Enterprise Products Partners trades near $37 and pays $0.55 per unit quarterly, annualizing to $2.20. That puts the current yield near 5.9%. EPD has raised its distribution for 27 consecutive years, which matters to a retiree who needs the income to grow. The unit price has risen roughly 35% over the past year, signaling underlying business strength.
British American Tobacco trades near almost $59 and pays $0.83 per quarter, annualizing to about $3.34. The current yield is near 5.7%. BTI has raised its 2026 quarterly dividend meaningfully from $0.75 in 2025, and the company’s smokeless transformation, including 310% Modern Oral revenue growth in the U.S., gives the dividend a business rationale beyond legacy tobacco cash flow.
Verizon trades near $46 and pays $0.69 per share quarterly, annualizing to $2.76. The current yield is close to 5.9%. VZ has raised its dividend every year for over two decades and has a 27-year unbroken quarterly payment history. Fixed wireless subscriber growth and the pending Frontier acquisition add fiber exposure. The debt load is real, but the cash flow to service it is equally real: $19.8 billion in free cash flow in FY2024.
Energy Transfer trades near $19 and pays $0.335 per unit quarterly, annualizing to $1.34. The current yield is close to 7%. ET has raised its distribution every quarter since 2022, climbing from $0.175 in Q1 2022 to $0.335 in Q1 2026. The company has secured supply agreements with Oracle for data center natural gas delivery, adding a growth catalyst most midstream names lack.
The Compounding Trap Most Income Investors Miss
A 5.9% yield that grows 5% annually doubles the income stream in roughly 14 years. A 10% yield that stays flat never does. EPD’s 27-year distribution growth streak means an investor who bought a decade ago is earning a much higher yield on their original cost basis than the current 5.9% suggests. High-yield strategies at 10% or 12% rarely offer that.
For a $60,000 income target, the moderate tier, somewhere between $857,000 and $1,050,000 in capital, is where these four tickers live. The aggressive tier gets you there with less capital but introduces meaningful risk of distribution cuts and principal loss over time.
Three Steps Worth Taking Before You Build This Portfolio
- Calculate your actual annual spending rather than using your salary as the target. Most retirees spend less than they earned, and shaving $10,000 off the income target reduces the required capital significantly at a 5.9% yield.
- Model the tax treatment of each income type. MLP distributions from EPD and ET involve K-1 forms and return-of-capital components that defer taxes but complicate filing. BTI dividends are subject to foreign withholding tax in some accounts. VZ dividends are straightforward qualified dividends.
- Check the next distribution announcement dates. EPD reports Q1 2026 results around May 4 and ET reports around May 5, both before market open. Those reports will confirm whether distribution growth continues or stalls, which is the single most important variable for an income-focused holder.