The post Does VIG or SCHD Deserve the Core Dividend Slot in a $500,000 Retirement Portfolio? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A retiree with $500,000 earmarked for dividend equities faces a genuine fork in the road between Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (NYSEARCA:VIG) and Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA:SCHD). VIG pays a modest current yield but compounds payout growth from companies with long dividend-raise streaks. SCHD pays roughly double the current income but leans into mature, value-tilted businesses with less room to run. Picking between VIG and SCHD for the core dividend slot is really a choice between income tomorrow and income today.
VIG tracks the S&P U.S. Dividend Growers Index, screening for companies with 10-plus years of consecutive dividend increases and excluding the highest-yielding names to filter out distressed payers. The result is a quality tilt with meaningful technology and industrial exposure and a current yield around 1.7% to 1.8%. On a $500,000 position, that produces roughly $8,500 to $9,000 a year in income. The expense ratio sits at just 4 basis points.
SCHD screens the Dow Jones U.S. Dividend 100 Index for fundamentals (cash flow to debt, ROE, dividend yield, five-year dividend growth) and currently yields about 3.9%, throwing off roughly $19,500 a year on the same $500,000. The fund manages $71.6 billion at a 6 basis point expense ratio. Its top 10 holdings, including Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck, ConocoPhillips, Lockheed Martin, Chevron, Verizon, AbbVie, Cisco, Coca-Cola, and Altria, make up about 41% of assets, leaning heavily on healthcare, energy, and consumer staples.
Over the trailing three years through June 8, 2026, VIG returned 56% on a price basis while SCHD returned 51%. The S&P 500, via SPY, delivered 72% over the same window. Both dividend ETFs trailed the broad market, which is the cost of choosing income discipline over the index’s mega-cap growth weighting.
The five-year gap is wider. VIG returned 66% versus SCHD’s 50% and SPY’s 75%. VIG’s quality tilt captured more of the past five years’ tech-led rally. Over the past 12 months, SCHD’s 26% gain outpaced VIG’s 18%, reflecting a rotation back into value names.
VIG also delivered on dividend growth: 2025 distributions of $0.9377, $0.8712, $0.8647, and $0.8844 per share were up from a 2022 range of $0.6939 to $0.8687. SCHD’s quarterly payouts normalized to the $0.24 to $0.28 range in 2025 after a 2024 reset.
SCHD fits a retiree who needs income flowing into the checking account now and is comfortable with sector concentration in defensives. VIG fits a younger retiree or pre-retiree with a 15-plus year horizon who wants rising income, lower volatility than the S&P 500, and a quality screen that has historically kept pace with growth-tilted markets. A 50/50 split is a reasonable middle: roughly $14,000 in current income on $500,000, broader sector coverage, and dividend growth baked in. The decision turns on whether the next check or the next decade matters more.
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The post Does VIG or SCHD Deserve the Core Dividend Slot in a $500,000 Retirement Portfolio? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

