One hundred thousand dollars a year is what a senior nurse, a mid-career software engineer, or a federal GS-13 in most metros earns. Replacing that paycheck withOne hundred thousand dollars a year is what a senior nurse, a mid-career software engineer, or a federal GS-13 in most metros earns. Replacing that paycheck with

How Much Do You Really Need Invested to Replace a $100,000 Salary With Dividends in 2026?

2026/06/18 20:29
5 min read
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The post How Much Do You Really Need Invested to Replace a $100,000 Salary With Dividends in 2026? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

  • You need $2.5 million to $2.9 million in Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD) or Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (VYM) to replace a $100,000 salary with dividends.
  • Higher-yield funds like JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPI) require less capital upfront but sacrifice the growth that makes dividend income outpace inflation over time.
  • Most retirees blend conservative and aggressive dividend funds to hit $1.8 million while preserving the income growth that salary-replacement really demands.
  • 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.

One hundred thousand dollars a year is what a senior nurse, a mid-career software engineer, or a federal GS-13 in most metros earns. Replacing that paycheck with dividend income is a math problem before it is an investing problem, and the math depends almost entirely on the yield you accept.

With the 10-year Treasury at 4.6% and the Fed funds upper bound at 3.8%, the income landscape in 2026 is the friendliest it has been for retirees in a decade. Here is what $100,000 of dividend income costs at three different yield tiers.

The Conservative Tier: 3% to 4% Yield

This is the dividend-growth and broad high-dividend bucket. At a 3.5% blended yield, $100,000 divided by 0.035 equals roughly $2,857,000 in capital. At 4%, it drops to exactly $2,500,000.

Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA:SCHD) anchors this tier. SCHD charges 6 basis points and held $71.6 billion in assets at the end of 2025, with top weights in Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck, ConocoPhillips, Lockheed Martin, and Chevron. Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (NYSEARCA:VYM) is the cheaper, broader sibling at 4 basis points, paying $0.8617 per share in the March 2026 quarter.

The tradeoff: you need the most capital, but the dividend stream tends to grow, and the principal participates in equity appreciation. SCHD has returned 229% over the past decade on a total-return basis, and VYM has returned 202% over the same span.

The Moderate Tier: 5% to 7% Yield

Covered-call equity funds, preferred-share ETFs, and REITs sit here. A 6% blended yield brings the capital target down to about $1,667,000.

JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA:JEPI) is the category face. Its 0.35% expense ratio buys a covered-call overlay on a portfolio currently concentrated in NVIDIA, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon. JEPI paid $0.38921 in June 2026, with monthly distributions ranging from roughly $0.34 to $0.54 over the past year. JEPI’s share price is $55.69, up just 7% over the past year, illustrating why this vehicle is built for income rather than appreciation.

The Aggressive Tier: 8% to 12% Yield

At a 10% yield, you need $1,000,000 to generate $100,000. At 12%, roughly $833,000.

JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (NASDAQ:JEPQ) is the headline name. JEPQ’s prospectus distribution yield is 11.2%, achieved by selling out-of-the-money calls on the Nasdaq 100. 2025 distributions totaled $6.15 per share, up from $5.54 in 2024. Business development companies, mortgage REITs, and high-yield bond funds round out this tier.

The catch: capped upside and distribution variability. JEPQ has appreciated 73% since June 2023, but its monthly payout swings widely, and in a sustained Nasdaq drawdown the option premiums shrink while NAV falls.

Why the Lower Yield Often Wins

A 3.5% yield that grows 8% annually doubles the income stream in roughly nine years. Starting with $100,000 of SCHD income, you would be drawing close to $200,000 by year nine on the same principal. A 12% yield that holds flat, or drifts down as distributions adjust, stays at $100,000 forever, and in real terms loses to inflation every year.

That is why most pre-retirees barbell the two. A blend of 60% SCHD or VYM and 40% JEPI lands near a 5.5% blended yield, requiring around $1.8 million for $100,000, while preserving meaningful dividend growth on the larger sleeve.

What to Do Next

  1. Replace spending, not salary. Pull your last two years of actual expenses. After payroll taxes, 401(k) contributions, and a paid-off mortgage, many $100,000 earners need closer to $65,000 of replacement income.
  2. Place covered-call funds inside tax-advantaged accounts. JEPI and JEPQ distributions are largely ordinary income. For a married couple, the 24% bracket starts at $211,400 in 2026, so the tax drag in a taxable account is real.
  3. Compare 10-year total returns side by side. Pull SCHD’s 229% versus JEPQ’s track record before you anchor on yield alone. Yield is just one slice of total return.

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The post How Much Do You Really Need Invested to Replace a $100,000 Salary With Dividends in 2026? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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