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    Home»ETFs»3 Low Cost ETFs Built for Long Term Retirement Income
    ETFs

    3 Low Cost ETFs Built for Long Term Retirement Income

    January 20, 2026


    When it comes to retirement planning, many investors are going to spend years chasing returns only to realize too late that what they really needed was income. The difference matters more than most people think, because returns are unpredictable and income, if it’s structured correctly, shows up whether the market is up, down, or going sideways.

    This is where low-cost dividend ETFs are earning their place in retirement portfolios, as they provide broad diversification, predictable cash flow, and the kind of simplicity that lets retirees focus on living rather than constantly worrying about their investments.

    The best part is that you don’t need to pay high fees to earn a reliable income, as some of the most effective retirement tools available today come with expense ratios that barely register.

    Why Low Cost Matters More in Retirement

    Every dollar paid in fees is a dollar that isn’t compounding in your favor, and this is something every investor, retail or otherwise, should know right from the very start of their investing journey. Over a 20-30 year period in retirement, even small differences in expense ratios can translate into thousands of dollars in lost income. This is why names like Vanguard, Schwab, and State Street have become the go-to names for investors who are focused on earning income. The ETF lineups of these three names and other big investing groups like them help keep costs down while still delivering competitive yields.

    Of course, the other advantage of these low-ETFs is transparency, as you know what you own, what you are paying, and you can reasonably predict what kind of income to expect each quarter. For retirees who have spent decades dealing with complicated financial solutions, simplicity is well worth considering as much as possible.

    Vanguard Real Estate ETF

    The Vanguard Real Estate ETF (NYSE:VNQ) offers exposure to the real estate sector through a diversified basket of REITs. With a current yield of 3.75% and an annual dividend of $3.47 per share, this fund provides realiable quarterly income backed by rental payments from commercial properties, data centers, storage facilities, and even residential real estate.

    For investors who own 1,000 shares, this translates to roughly $3,470 in dividend income per year, which is nothing to ignore. The lone caveat is that the fund’s payout ratio of 125.48% is understandably concerning at first glance, but this is pretty typical for REIT-focused portfolios. As REITs are required by law to distribute most of their taxable income to shareholders, it naturally pushes this number higher than you would otherwise see in a traditional equity fund.

    A dividend growth of only 1.12% is understandably modest, but real estate income tends to be stable rather than explosive. This ETF works best for investors who want sector diversification and are comfortable with the understanding that real estate moves on different wavelengths than the rest of the market.

    State Street SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 High Dividend ETF

    For investors who want to focus who want more straightforward exposure to the highest-yielding stocks in the S&P 500, the SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 High Dividend ETF (NYSE:SPYD) delivers. The fund currently yields 4.36% with an annual payout of $1.96, paid quarterly.

    What makes the SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 High Dividend ETF so attractive is its equal-weight approach to its holdings. Instead of concentrating heavily in a few mega-cap names, the fund spreads its exposure more evenly across high-yield sectors like financials, utilities, real estate, and consumer staples. This prevents any one company from dominating a portfolio and reduces the risk that comes with being overconcentrated in just one or two sectors.

    The payout ratio of 68.59% sits in a healthy range, which suggests that underlying companies have room to maintain and grow their dividends. Speaking of growth, the SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 High Dividend ETF has posted growth of 5.01%, which provides meaningful inflation protection over time. For a retiree with 1,000 shares, the current yield would generate approximately $1,960 in annual income, and that figure has the potential to rise in the near future.

    Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF

    The Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF (NYSE:SCHD) has become one of the most popular dividend growth ETFs for good reason, as it screens for companies that have strong fundamentals, consistent dividend histories, and the financial strength to push through various economic cycles. The current dividend yield of 3.63% and annual dividend of $1.05 per share might seem lower than other potential ETF options, but the story here is more about sustainability.

    The Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF’s payout ratio of 57.89% is the lowest on this list, which is a strong signal that the companies in its portfolio are retaining enough earnings to reinvest in their businesses while still rewarding shareholders. This conservative approach tends to produce more durable income over the long term.

    The real strength of the Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF is that its dividend growth is 5.35%, which is good news for retirees who have a longer time horizon or who want their income to keep pace with rising costs. A portfolio that yields 3.63% today but grows that payout by around 5% annually will look very different in 10 years than a higher-yielding fund that has stagnant dividend growth.



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