Monthly income is having a moment. Retirees and active income investors are pulling cash from money-market funds yielding less than before, and the ETF industryMonthly income is having a moment. Retirees and active income investors are pulling cash from money-market funds yielding less than before, and the ETF industry

4 Monthly Dividend ETFs Yielding Up to 13 Percent for Income Investors in 2026

2026/06/17 19:38
6 min read
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The post 4 Monthly Dividend ETFs Yielding Up to 13 Percent for Income Investors in 2026 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

  • Invesco S&P 500 High Dividend Low Volatility ETF (SPHD) — lowest-yield defensive choice for retirees seeking monthly income.
  • JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPQ) offers 11% trailing yield mixing growth with covered-call income consistency.
  • Global X SuperDividend ETF (SDIV) produces pure 9% yield but principal appreciation remains elusive over longer periods.
  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

Monthly income is having a moment. Retirees and active income investors are pulling cash from money-market funds yielding less than before, and the ETF industry has responded with options-based and high-dividend products that pay every 30 days instead of every 90. Goldman Sachs notes that global assets in active ETFs have grown 46% annually since the start of 2020, and State Street observes that covered-call ETFs alone recorded more than 3,400% AUM growth to US$2.6 billion as investor appetite for yield-plus-equity exposure intensified.

Four monthly-pay ETFs span the realistic risk spectrum for an income-focused portfolio in 2026: the Invesco S&P 500 High Dividend Low Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA:SPHD) for defensive yield, the JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (NASDAQ:JEPQ) for growth-tilted covered-call income, the Global X SuperDividend ETF (NYSEARCA:SDIV) for the highest pure-equity headline yield, and the NEOS Nasdaq-100 High Income ETF (NASDAQ:QQQI) as the newer, tax-efficient alternative anchoring the “up to 13%” claim. Ranked from most durable to most aggressive, here is how each fits.

SPHD: The Defensive Anchor

SPHD solves the opposite problem from covered-call funds. Where JEPQ and QQQI manufacture yield through options premium, SPHD owns 50 of the highest-yielding, lowest-volatility names in the S&P 500, tilting heavily toward utilities, consumer staples, and real estate. That sector mix tends to hold up when growth stocks roll over.

The fund pays monthly, with 2026 distributions running between $0.20271 and $0.20937 per share. That is a step up from 2025, when monthly payouts started near $0.138 in January and worked higher through the year. Shares trade around $50, with the ETF returning about 10% over the past year. Headline yield sits near 4.7%, the lowest of the group.

SPHD will not keep pace with the Nasdaq in a tech rally, and the utility-heavy book is sensitive to interest rate moves. But for an investor needing a monthly check with the smallest probability of a double-digit drawdown, this is the conservative choice.

JEPQ: Growth Exposure With an Options Overlay

JEPQ sits in the middle of the durability spectrum. JPMorgan’s portfolio team runs an actively selected sleeve of Nasdaq-100 equities and overlays equity-linked notes that synthesize a covered-call position. The fund’s stated goal is monthly distributable income and Nasdaq 100 exposure with less volatility. The expense ratio is 0.35%, cheap for an active strategy.

Monthly payments have been consistent. The June 2026 distribution came in at $0.56444 per share, with 2026 payouts ranging from about $0.47 to $0.59. The prospectus lists a trailing dividend yield of 11%, and the share price has climbed to around $59 after returning roughly 26% over the past year. Investors got paid roughly 10% in cash and still participated in the underlying tech rally.

Covered calls cap upside. In a runaway growth quarter, JEPQ trails the Nasdaq-100. In sideways or modestly down markets, option premium does most of the work. Distributions also fluctuate with implied volatility, so income flows are less smooth than SPHD’s.

SDIV: Global Yield at the Top of the Equity Stack

SDIV is the pure-yield maximizer. The Global X fund tracks an index of 100 highest-yielding equities worldwide, with heavy weight toward international REITs, mortgage REITs, business development companies, and high-payout utilities. That structure produces a stated yield near 9%, but it comes with currency risk and NAV-erosion problems that have dogged this fund for years.

SDIV trades at about $25, and over five years the share price has actually declined roughly 5%. Over ten years it is essentially flat. Investors collected the yield, but principal has not appreciated. Monthly distributions have ranged from $0.18 to about $0.197 in 2026, with $2.301 paid across 12 monthly checks in 2025.

2026 has been friendlier for SDIV holders. The fund is up about 23% over the past 12 months as global value and REIT names rallied. SDIV is a pure yield instrument; the monthly check is the entire point of owning it. It belongs in portfolios where the monthly check is the entire point and the investor accepts that the underlying may not compound.

QQQI: The High-Yield Contrarian Pick

QQQI is the overlooked option deserving closer look. NEOS launched the fund to do what JEPQ structurally cannot: write index options on the Nasdaq-100 (rather than on individual stocks or equity-linked notes) and route the premium through Section 1256 tax treatment, which blends 60% long-term and 40% short-term capital gains rates. For taxable accounts, that distinction can matter more than 50 basis points of yield.

Monthly payouts in 2026 have run between $0.6089 and $0.6589 per share, with the May 2026 payment hitting $0.6589. Against a share price of about $55, annualized that produces a yield in the low-to-mid teens. The expense ratio is 0.68%, higher than JEPQ but defensible given the options strategy and tax structure.

QQQI delivered on total return. Shares are up about 26% over the past year and nearly 10% year to date, broadly matching JEPQ. The caveat: the fund only launched in January 2024, so there is no full-cycle data showing how the strategy holds up in a sustained tech drawdown. Higher distributions mean a fatter cushion, but also faster return-of-capital risk if the Nasdaq sells off hard.

Picking the Right Monthly Payer

SPHD is the conservative anchor for someone close to or in retirement valuing capital stability over headline yield. JEPQ is the workhorse for an investor wanting Nasdaq exposure without full QQQ volatility. SDIV is the income-only sleeve, useful only if the holder accepts that principal is unlikely to compound. QQQI is the most aggressive and most interesting from a tax-efficiency standpoint, but also the newest, highest-yielding, and most exposed to NAV erosion if equity markets turn.

A blended approach weighting toward SPHD and JEPQ with smaller sleeves of QQQI and SDIV captures the spread of yield, growth, and downside profiles without betting on a single mechanism. Together they form a monthly-income engine.

Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF didn’t make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

The post 4 Monthly Dividend ETFs Yielding Up to 13 Percent for Income Investors in 2026 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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