Realty Income (O) stock trades at the intersection of income and slow-burn growth, and the latest numbers give both camps something to work with.
Realty Income Corporation, O
The REIT posted Q1 2026 revenue of $1.55 billion. AFFO per share came in at $1.13, up from $1.06 in the same period last year. FFO per share was $1.06, with normalized FFO at $1.07.
Management followed that up by raising its full-year 2026 AFFO guidance to a range of $4.41 to $4.44 per share, ahead of its earlier forecast.
The company also lifted its 2026 investment guidance to $9.5 billion from $8.0 billion. That upward revision signals the deal pipeline is active and the team is finding places to put capital to work.
As of March 31, 2026, Realty Income held interests in 15,571 properties leased to 1,786 clients across 92 industries. The weighted average remaining lease term sits at roughly 8.7 years.
That kind of scale and diversity cuts dependence on any single tenant or sector. It also gives the company a better hand when it comes to securing financing and sourcing new acquisitions.
The monthly dividend remains the headline attraction. March 2026 marked the 114th consecutive quarterly dividend increase and the 134th increase since 1994.
The annualized dividend currently stands at $3.246 per share. Management said the Q1 dividend represented 71.7% of diluted AFFO per share — a payout ratio that leaves room to maintain the payment and still retain capital.
Not all high-yield REITs can say the same. Realty Income’s payout has stayed disciplined, which is part of why income investors keep coming back.
One of the fresher parts of the story is Realty Income’s growing use of private capital. Reuters reported in March that Apollo committed $1 billion for a 49% stake in a new joint venture targeting single-tenant retail properties.
Realty Income also highlighted partnerships with GIC and the completion of a $1.7 billion cornerstone capital raise for its U.S. Core Plus fund.
If the company can keep sourcing deals through these vehicles, it could expand its investment activity without putting as much pressure on common equity issuance.
That said, risks remain. Reuters noted in February that Realty Income’s original 2026 outlook disappointed some investors due to slower demand, higher costs, and lower same-store rent growth expectations. The company has since revised guidance higher, but the stock is still sensitive to financing costs.
Analysts on MarketBeat show a Hold consensus — 1 strong buy, 6 buys, 8 holds, and 1 sell. The average price target sits around $67.50.
The post Is Realty Income (O) Stock Still the Best Monthly Dividend Play Right Now? appeared first on CoinCentral.


