Five high-dividend stocks are drawing attention from income investors looking for reliable returns over the next three to five years. The names are AbbVie, Chevron, Shell, Enterprise Products Partners, and Realty Income.
Each yields above 3%, and each has a business case that goes beyond just the dividend. The idea is not to chase the biggest yield. It is to find companies with steady cash flow, manageable debt, and dividends backed by real earnings.
AbbVie is the top-ranked pick in the group. The stock yields around 3.3%, and the company reported 2025 revenue of $61.16 billion, up 8.6% from the prior year.
AbbVie Inc., ABBV
Drugs like Skyrizi and Rinvoq have helped replace lost sales from Humira, which faced biosimilar competition in recent years. The transition has gone better than many analysts expected.
AbbVie raised its dividend by 5.5% for 2026. On Wall Street, MarketBeat shows 16 buys, 9 holds, and 0 sells, giving it a Moderate Buy rating. No analyst currently has a sell on the stock.
Chevron reported record production levels in 2025 and a 158% reserve replacement ratio, meaning it replaced far more oil and gas reserves than it produced during the year.
Chevron Corporation, CVX
It raised its quarterly dividend to $1.78 per share. Analyst sentiment sits at a Hold overall, with 14 buys, 6 holds, and 4 sells on MarketBeat.
The mixed rating could work in investors’ favor. Less enthusiasm from Wall Street often leaves more room for upside if oil prices hold firm and the company keeps returning cash to shareholders.
Shell is not just an oil company. It is also one of the largest liquefied natural gas operators in the world, which gives it a different profile from most U.S. energy peers.
In 2025, Shell generated $42.9 billion in cash flow from operations and $26.1 billion in free cash flow. The company targets returning 40% to 50% of operating cash flow to shareholders.
MarketBeat lists Shell with 6 buys, 13 holds, and 0 sell ratings. Its LNG business adds a layer of exposure that pure oil majors do not offer.
Enterprise Products Partners offers the highest yield in the group at close to 6%. The partnership reported distribution coverage of 1.7x in its latest results, meaning cash flow comfortably covers the payout.
That coverage ratio matters. A yield near 6% can look like a warning sign, but strong coverage suggests the dividend is not under pressure.
MarketBeat shows a Moderate Buy consensus with 10 buys, 6 holds, and 2 sells. Investors who take a position will receive a K-1 tax form, which is standard for master limited partnerships.
Realty Income is known as “The Monthly Dividend Company” and pays shareholders every month. It reported Q4 2025 adjusted funds from operations of $1.08 per share, with net debt to EBITDAre at 5.4x.
The stock is rate-sensitive, meaning its performance tends to track interest rate moves closely. If rates fall over the next few years, Realty Income could benefit from both its yield and a rise in its valuation.
Analyst sentiment is cautious, with 6 buys, 9 holds, and 1 sell on MarketBeat and a broader Hold consensus on StockAnalysis.
Across all five names, AbbVie ranks first for its blend of income and earnings growth. Chevron and Shell offer energy exposure with strong cash returns. Enterprise Products ranks fourth for high current income, and Realty Income fifth for monthly dividends and potential rate-driven upside.
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