The post How to Build $3,000 a Month in Dividend Income to Cover the Average Social Security Check appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
The average retired worker receives roughly $2,000 a month from Social Security. For many retirees, that covers only part of the budget. Building a second Social Security-sized check from dividends can help cover housing, healthcare, travel, family support, or simply provide a larger margin of safety in retirement. The challenge is not finding the right stock. It is accumulating enough capital to generate the income in the first place.
The target here is $3,000 a month, or $36,000 a year. From there, the math is straightforward. Divide the income target by the yield you are willing to accept, and the required portfolio size quickly comes into focus. The tradeoff is equally simple: higher yields require less capital but typically come with more risk, slower growth, or both.
The arithmetic is unforgiving. To generate $36,000 in annual dividends:
For context, the average Baby Boomer 401(k) balance sits at $267,900, with an average IRA of $257,002. Even doubled, that is short of the 5% tier and barely covers the 10% tier. The 10-year Treasury at almost 4.5% is the risk-free benchmark every equity yield below must clear with credit and equity risk attached.
Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) is the archetype. The company just raised its quarterly payout to $1.34 a share, extending 64 consecutive years of increases. The current yield is only 2.3%, so a pure JNJ portfolio would need even more than $1 million to hit the target. The payoff is compounding: the quarterly dividend has roughly doubled from $0.75 in 2016, and the stock returned 164% over ten years. Income and principal both grew.
Realty Income (NYSE:O) calls itself the Monthly Dividend Company for a reason. It has paid 670 consecutive monthly dividends, the cadence Social Security itself uses. The current monthly payout of about 27 cents annualizes near 5.4%, with Q1 2026 AFFO per share of $1.13, up 6.6% year over year and portfolio occupancy of 98.9%. Total return is modest (59% over ten years), which is the tradeoff: more yield today, slower growth tomorrow.
This is where covered-call equity funds, preferred-share portfolios, and higher-yielding REITs sit. Main Street Capital (NYSE:MAIN) pays a regular monthly dividend of $0.26 plus a $0.30 quarterly supplemental, which together push the all-in yield above the base 5.9% figure. NAV per share rose to $33.46 last quarter, and non-accruals sit at just 1.2% at fair value. Investors pay a premium to NAV for that consistency.
Ares Capital (NASDAQ:ARCC) yields 10.2% on a $1.92 annualized dividend. Q1 2026 total investment income jumped 71.1% year over year to $763 million, but core EPS of $0.47 missed the $0.48 dividend, and NAV per share slipped to $19.59 from $19.94. That is the aggressive-tier signature: the check clears, but the underlying asset can shrink. Non-accruals at 2.1% of amortized cost remain manageable, yet recession would test that.
A 10% yield that never grows loses purchasing power every year. Inflation steadily raises the cost of housing, healthcare, food, and everything else retirees buy. Meanwhile, dividend-growth companies can increase their payouts over time. Johnson & Johnson’s annual dividend climbed from $4.04 in 2020 to $5.14 in 2025, while Ares Capital’s quarterly dividend has remained unchanged since early 2023. Over a retirement that lasts twenty years or more, the difference between a growing check and a flat one can become substantial.
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The post How to Build $3,000 a Month in Dividend Income to Cover the Average Social Security Check appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


