If you had enough passive dividend income and interest or rental income to perpetually support your expenses, and you could direct your creativity and passion to do what you want, how would you spend your time?
When you buy dividend stocks, you get paid dividends, and with enough time, you can build a diversified portfolio that provides you with enough income to support your lifestyle.
When your passive dividend income combined with interest income and other types of passive income exceeds your expenses, you’re financially free. After that, all active income is optional, so you can focus on doing what you want to do, and work on what you want to work on.
Dividend Income is More Reliable than Employment Income
Employment income for most people is a foundation of their personal finance strategy. This is okay at first, but over time, you’ll want to build some other income streams in order to diversify your overall financial position.
-If all of your income comes from a single employment source, then if that source gets shut off, you’re out of luck.
-But, if you have 20 or so companies paying you dividends, and those dividends grow each year at a rate that exceeds inflation, then you’re in pretty good shape. When you combine that dividend income with bond interest, rental income, and your active income sources (employment income, business income, freelancing income, and so forth), then your financial condition becomes quite solid. Once passive streams exceed your expenses, you’re free.
How to Build Dividend Income Over Time
Dividend income isn’t just for retirees, although it does work wonders in retirement. By diligently putting away an extra grand or so each month, as soon as you receive income, then you’ll start to build a fairly substantial dividend portfolioover time.
For example, if you start with a portfolio of $20,000 with a total dividend yield of 4%, and you:
-Add $1,000 per month, and increase this by 5% each year
-Reinvest your dividends
-Get a total rate of return of 10%, either after taxes or in a tax-deferred account
-Add $1,000 per month, and increase this by 5% each year
-Reinvest your dividends
-Get a total rate of return of 10%, either after taxes or in a tax-deferred account
Then your dividend income will grow like this:
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