The Portfolio That Lets You Go Part-time Five Years Early
The post The Portfolio That Lets You Go Part-Time Five Years Early appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
- You need $1.14 million in dividend-growth stocks like Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) earning 3.5% to replace $40,000 annually from part-time work—or far less capital at higher yields.
- Procter & Gamble (PG) and Realty Income (O) offer faster income now, but flat payouts lose to growing dividends once inflation hits harder over two decades.
- Dropping to part-time work costs you $8,000–$15,000 yearly in lost health insurance and employer matching that dividend income cannot replace.
- 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.
A worker earning $80,000 full time who wants to drop to a 20-hour-a-week role paying roughly $40,000 faces one math problem: the portfolio must generate the missing $40,000 a year. Bridge income can be built across several yield tiers, and the choice between them determines how much capital is required, how much risk is assumed, and how durable the income may prove over time.
What $40,000 in Dividend Income Actually Costs
The equation: income divided by yield equals required capital.
- 3.5% yield: about $1.14 million ($3,333 per month). Dividend-growth blue chips and aristocrat ETFs. Lowest current income, highest long-term durability.
- 5% yield: $800,000 ($3,333 per month). Net-lease REITs, utility-heavy income funds, investment-grade preferreds. Yield rises, growth slows.
- 7% yield: about $571,000 ($3,333 per month). High-dividend equity funds, some BDCs, and preferred-stock funds. Income is generally more sensitive to credit conditions and interest-rate cycles than lower-yield approaches.
- 10% yield: $400,000 ($3,333 per month). Mortgage REITs, leveraged covered-call funds, high-yield bond funds. Lowest capital required, highest risk of NAV erosion and distribution cuts.
The conservative tier includes Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), which just raised its quarterly payout to $1.34 for a 64th straight year of increases, and Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG), on its 70th consecutive annual hike. NextEra Energy (NYSE:NEE) yields in the upper-2% range but has grown its payout substantially over the past several years. The moderate tier centers on Realty Income (NYSE:O), paying a monthly dividend and yielding roughly 5%. The aggressive tier includes higher-yield securities such as Altria (NYSE:MO), mortgage REITs, and covered-call funds, many of which offer yields well above the broader market.
Buying Back Half Your Week
Twenty hours reclaims a full waking day plus an afternoon. That time goes to aging parents, a child’s final years at home, a side business, or travel without burning vacation days. Surveys show many workers want control of the calendar, not full retirement. The portfolio funds that control.
The Hidden Cost of Going Part-Time
Cutting hours often reduces or eliminates employer-subsidized health insurance, full 401(k) matching, long-term disability coverage, group life insurance, and pension accrual. For workers who must replace employer health coverage before Medicare eligibility, costs can be substantial, although ACA subsidies may reduce the expense depending on income and household size. Before moving part-time, estimate the value of lost benefits and add that amount to your income-replacement target.
Social Security at Half Pay
Social Security uses your highest 35 years of indexed earnings. Workers with many years of strong earnings often discover that reducing income late in their careers has a smaller effect on future benefits than expected, particularly if lower-earning years are already part of the calculation. However, the impact varies by work history, so check your Social Security statement before making the switch.
Why a Growing 3.5% Often Beats a Flat 10%
Run two portfolios paying $40,000 today. Portfolio A starts at 3.5% with 7% annual dividend growth. Portfolio B starts at 10% with none. By year 10, A throws off about $78,700 a year. By year 20, A generates roughly $154,000 while B still pays $40,000. Inflation steadily reduces the purchasing power of flat income streams, while dividend growth can help offset rising costs. Historical performance from companies such as Johnson & Johnson and NextEra Energy illustrates how growing earnings and dividends can contribute to long-term compounding, although future results may differ.
Half Retirement vs. the Hard Stop
Three paths exist: full retirement at 65, part-time from 60 to 70, or work to 70. The middle path stretches benefits, lets Social Security grow toward delayed credits, keeps you in employer health coverage longer, and reclaims years that many people still spend in relatively good health. For many middle-income households with a meaningful portfolio, it can provide an appealing blend of income, flexibility, and quality of life.
When Full-Time Still Wins
Stay full time if you have a defined-benefit pension still accruing meaningfully, a generous match you have not maxed, peak earning years ahead, or a portfolio under roughly $400,000. Subsidized healthcare alone can be worth $20,000+ a year in pre-Medicare hands.
Three Actions This Month
- Audit actual spending, not salary. Many earners spend $55,000 of an $80,000 paycheck. The replacement target may be far below $40,000.
- Price the 10-year total return of a dividend-growth basket against a 10% yield fund. Look at distributions plus NAV. The growth side usually wins on a real-dollar basis.
- Model the tax and healthcare bill in your bracket. Qualified dividends, ACA subsidy cliffs, and state income tax all change what $40,000 of dividend income actually deposits in your account.
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