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The Schwab Dividend 100 ETF has delivered at least 1.3 times the S&P 500's dividend yield for its entire 12-year history.
The fund's top three holdings account for just 13.7% of assets, versus 20.5% for the S&P 500.
Total returns often lag SPY-style trackers, but income-first investors get steadier, more predictable payouts.
The Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEMKT: SCHD), also known as the Schwab Dividend 100 ETF, is the kind of fund you pick when you want income to arrive like clockwork.
It skips extreme growth names with low dividend yields such as Nvidia and Microsoft. Instead, the fund leans into reliable dividend payers such as AbbVie, Home Depot, and Coca-Cola. With only 13.7% of the fund concentrated in its top three holdings, the Schwab Dividend 100 ETF spreads risk more evenly than the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) and tends to produce steadier dividends over time.
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If your goal is decades of passive income you can count on, this fund can serve as a sensible, low-maintenance core.
Let's start with the basics:
There are other dividend-focused ETFs on the market, but the Schwab Dividend 100 ETF tracks a unique high-quality income index with a heavy focus on high-quality dividend funding. It's not a simple bet on high yields, but a more sophisticated approach that also considers each company's fiscal management and cash profits.
SCHD Dividend Yield data by YCharts
It should be said that the Schwab Dividend 100 ETF isn't for everyone. The fund often lags behind S&P 500 trackers like the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSEMKT: VOO) in terms of long-term price gains. Even if you reinvest your dividends in more shares along the way, the broader market's total returns are usually stronger. That's especially true in the ongoing artificial intelligence (AI) boom, where many of the market's top performers come with modest dividend yields or none at all:
That's the trade-off you sign up for. You give up some upside during megacap growth runs, and in return you get a steadier paycheck from your portfolio that arrives without a fuss.
For many income-first investors, that matters more than headline returns. Dividends pay the bills, fund weekend plans, cover health costs, or buy groceries without forcing a sale in a down market.
The Schwab Dividend 100 ETF is built for that role: reliable distributions from cash-generating businesses that have paid through cycles, and a mix of household-name holdings that feels like an old friend you can call on when you need it.
This dividend stability is not a promise, since dividends can be cut even in a diversified portfolio of high-quality payers. It is a practical approach, though.
If your plan is to find income to lean on for years, this fund makes it easier to sleep at night. You're relying on companies that have shown they can keep paying, and that they have the financial chops to keep the quarterly checks coming. Pair this security with a few growth-oriented stocks or ETFs if you still want some runway for upside, but treat the Schwab Dividend 100 ETF as the part of your portfolio that writes the checks.
You may not beat the market this way, but the Schwab Dividend 100 ETF's generous payouts should keep coming in any economy. This fund is for investors who value reliable income over maximum growth; skip it if you want to chase the next Nvidia.
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Anders Bylund has positions in Nvidia and Vanguard S&P 500 ETF. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends AbbVie, Home Depot, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Vanguard S&P 500 ETF. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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