3 High-Yield Dividend Stocks to Buy Now and Hold at Least a Decade

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If you're worried about having enough passive income to maintain your lifestyle during retirement, you're not alone. Having to spend more just to maintain their current standard of living is a constant concern for most families.

There isn't much that you can do to stop the march of inflation, but you can prepare. Filling your portfolio with dividend-paying stocks that raise their quarterly payouts faster than the underlying inflation rate could even lead to extra spending cash.

Medtronic (NYSE: MDT), Bristol Myers Squibb (NYSE: BMY), and AbbVie (NYSE: ABBV) have many years of reliable dividend growth under their belts. If there's one corner of the economy investors can count on to grow in good and bad macroeconomic conditions, it's the healthcare sector.

You can put off buying a new car for years, but medical conditions rarely give customers of these companies an option. Here's how adding them to your portfolio and holding them over the coming decade gives you a great chance to realize a growing passive income stream.

1. Medtronic

Medtronic got started with pacemakers in the 1950s. Cardiovascular devices such as leadless pacemakers and replacement valves are still a large part of the business, but there's much more. For example, it markets implantable devices that can alleviate chronic back pain.

Surgeons all over the world employing a growing suite of Medtronic's minimally invasive solutions have allowed the company to raise its dividend for 47 consecutive years. At recent prices, the stock offers an attractive 3.5% yield.

In the U.S. and other developed nations, populations are aging. Older folks use a lot of healthcare, which is driving up overall spending. The U.S. spent $4.9 trillion on healthcare in 2023, which was 7.5% more than it spent a year earlier.

Last year, Medtronic generated a healthy $5.5 billion in free cash flow but needed just 66% of this sum to meet its dividend obligation. With the unstoppable trend toward increasing healthcare expenses at its back, investors can reasonably expect plenty more dividend payout raises in the years ahead.

2. Bristol Myers Squibb

In the U.S., spending on prescription drugs rose 11.4% year over year to $450 billion in 2023. With this tailwind at its back, Bristol Myers Squibb has been able to raise its dividend payout for 16 consecutive years. The stock offers a 4.3% yield at recent prices.

Bristol Myers Squibb stock has been under pressure because there are aging blockbusters in its product lineup that could lose market share soon. For example, Eliquis is an oral blood thinner that racked up $3 billion in sales during the third quarter of 2024. It's responsible for 25% of total revenue but will likely begin competing with generic versions in the U.S. beginning in 2028.