Quick Read
Coca-Cola (KO) has 64 years of increases, 2.6% yield, and 72% forward FCF payout ratio. PepsiCo (PEP) has 54 years, 3.5% yield, and 98% FCF payout with $7.67B FCF barely covering $7.64B in dividends. Coca-Cola’s improving FCF guidance rebuilds dividend coverage after distorted 2025 results, while PepsiCo’s near-zero FCF margin leaves no buffer for further earnings or volume pressure.
Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) and PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP) are both Dividend Kings, but “reliable” is not the same as “equally safe.” Here is what the numbers show.
Coca-Cola: 64 Years of Increases, but Cash Flow Tells a Complicated Story
Coca-Cola sells beverages in nearly every country, generating $47.9 billion in FY2025 revenue from brands like Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, Sprite, fairlife, and Powerade. The dividend streak stands at 64 consecutive annual increases. The current quarterly payment is $0.53 per share, with the ex-dividend date set for March 13, 2026.
Metric
Value
Annual Dividend
$2.06 per share
Dividend Yield
2.6%
Consecutive Increases
64 years
Dividend King
Yes
FY2025 EPS
$3.04
Earnings Payout Ratio
67%
The 67% earnings payout ratio looks healthy, but cash flow is more complicated. Coca-Cola paid $8.8 billion in dividends in FY2025 against $7.4 billion in operating cash flow and $5.3 billion in reported free cash flow. The reported FCF was depressed by a one-time fairlife contingent consideration payment. Management guided FY2026 free cash flow of approximately $12.2 billion, putting the forward FCF payout ratio at roughly 72%—manageable, and the 2025 figures are distorted. The balance sheet carries $10.3 billion in cash and $32.2 billion in shareholders’ equity against $70.5 billion in total liabilities.
CEO James Quincey said on the Q4 2025 earnings call: “I’m encouraged by our performance in 2025 which showed both the resilience and momentum that define our business.” The 2026 guidance for 7% to 8% comparable EPS growth off a $3.00 base suggests the dividend cushion will rebuild this year.
Multiple executives sold Coca-Cola shares in late February and early March 2026 at prices between $77 and $80.75, though concurrent equity grants suggest routine tax-driven rebalancing rather than a loss of confidence.
PepsiCo: A Bigger Business, but the Dividend Math Is Tighter
PepsiCo combines beverages with Frito-Lay snacks and Quaker foods. FY2025 revenue came in at $93.9 billion, but it was a difficult year: operating income fell 19.6% and net income dropped 14%, driven by a $1.993 billion Rockstar brand impairment and restructuring charges.
Metric
Value
Annual Dividend
$5.92 per share (effective June 2026)
Dividend Yield
3.5%
Consecutive Increases
54 years
Dividend King
Yes
FY2025 EPS
$8.14
Earnings Payout Ratio
69%
FCF Payout Ratio
~98%
The FCF picture is the key concern. PepsiCo generated $7.67 billion in free cash flow in FY2025 against $7.64 billion in dividends paid—essentially a 1.0x coverage ratio with no margin for error. In 2024, FCF of $7.19 billion fell just short of the $7.23 billion dividend payout. The earnings payout ratio rose to 95% in 2025. Leverage is higher than Coca-Cola’s: $86.9 billion in total liabilities against $20.4 billion in shareholders’ equity, with the company holding $9.2 billion in cash as a near-term buffer.
CEO Ramon Laguarta announced the latest increase on the Q4 2025 call: “We are pleased to announce a 4 percent increase in our annualized dividend per share beginning with the June 2026 payment, representing our 54th consecutive annual increase.” Management also authorized a $10 billion share repurchase program through February 2030, though actual 2025 buybacks were a modest $1.0 billion.
The Verdict: Coke Has the Safer Dividend Today
Coke Dividend Safety Rating: Safe
Pepsi Dividend Safety Rating: Moderate Risk
Coca-Cola’s 2026 guided FCF of $12.2 billion puts the dividend on firmer footing after a distorted 2025. The 64-year streak, lower leverage, and accelerating EPS guidance make its dividend streak appear more structurally supported. PepsiCo’s near-100% FCF payout ratio, rising earnings payout ratio, and a year of earnings pressure leave little room for error. The 3.5% yield is attractive, but yield alone is not a safety argument. If commodity costs from tariffs accelerate or North America volume declines deepen, Pepsi’s FCF coverage could fall further below 1.0x.