5 Dividends That Beat Social Security’s Unpredictable COLA Adjustments

5 Dividends That Beat Social Security’s Unpredictable COLA Adjustments


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24/7/ Wall St.
  • Social Security COLA dropped from 8.7% in 2023 to 2.5% in 2025.

  • Realty Income pays dividends monthly with a 5.58% yield and has paid consistently since 1994.

  • PepsiCo offers the highest yield among consumer stocks at 3.69% with 6.8% average annual dividend growth.

  • A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here.

Social Security’s cost-of-living adjustments swing wildly year to year. The 2025 COLA came in at 2.5%, down from 3.2% in 2024 and 8.7% in 2023. For retirees counting on predictable income growth, this volatility creates planning challenges. The solution lies in dividend stocks that deliver consistent income growth regardless of Social Security.

These five stocks have demonstrated unwavering commitment to dividend increases through multiple economic cycles, offering investors a self-adjusting income stream that often outpaces official COLA adjustments.

Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) ranks fifth with its 2.43% dividend yield, the lowest among these stocks. However, dismissing JNJ on yield alone would be shortsighted. The healthcare giant delivered Q3 2025 revenue of $24.0 billion, up 6.8% year over year, beating estimates. EPS of $2.80 exceeded the $2.76 consensus.

The company’s dividend track record spans over 60 years of consecutive increases, earning Dividend King status. Recent quarterly dividend growth has averaged 4.8%, with the 2025 increase bringing the quarterly payment from $1.24 to $1.30. Net income surged 91% year over year to $5.15 billion in Q3. The company raised fiscal 2026 sales guidance to $93.7 billion while maintaining EPS guidance of $10.85.

With a 27.3% profit margin and 30.2% operating margin, JNJ generates substantial cash flow to support dividend growth. The stock’s beta of 0.349 makes it particularly defensive during volatility, while its AAA credit rating underscores financial strength.

Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) holds the longest dividend growth streak at 68 consecutive years. The consumer goods giant reported Q1 fiscal 2026 revenue of $22.40 billion, up 3.1% year over year, beating estimates. EPS of $1.95 topped the $1.90 consensus, while net income climbed 21% to $4.78 billion.

The company’s 2.84% dividend yield sits in the middle of this group, with the quarterly payment increasing from $1.0065 to $1.0568 in 2025, a 5% raise. Operating cash flow jumped 26% year over year to $5.41 billion. PG returned $3.8 billion to shareholders in the quarter through dividends and buybacks.


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