3 No-Brainer High-Yield Dividend Stocks to Buy in 2025

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High-yield dividend stocks can make great investments. They provide investors with a solid base return via their dividend income. Because of that, they don't have to grow that fast to produce an attractive total return. They also tend to be less volatile investments.

Black Hills (NYSE: BKH), Brookfield Renewable (NYSE: BEPC)(NYSE: BEP), and Brookfield Infrastructure (NYSE: BIPC) (NYSE: BIP) stand out to a few Fool.com contributors as no-brainer high-yield dividend stocks to buy this year. Here's what makes them look like such smart investments for 2025 and beyond.

Black Hills is a boring utility with a historically high yield

Reuben Gregg Brewer (Black Hills): As 2025 gets underway, Black Hills is offering investors a 4.5% dividend yield. That's toward the high end of the electric and gas utility's historical yield range over the past decade. This suggests the stock is on sale right now. That yield also happens to be well above the 2.7% yield of the average utility.

BKH Dividend Yield Chart
BKH Dividend Yield data by YCharts.

What's even more attractive is that Black Hills has an investment-grade rated balance sheet. A capital investment plan of $4.3 billion over the next five years, with potential upside in the out years. And management expects to be able to grow earnings at roughly 4% to 6% a year for the foreseeable future. The dividend, meanwhile, is likely to grow in line with the utility's earnings over time. Add 5% to 4.5%, and you get 9.5%, which is very close to the historical total return investors expect from the broader market.

And all this from one of the few utilities to have achieved Dividend King status, thanks to its 54-year history of annual dividend increases. Black Hills is a boring company that's a little off the radar of most investors. But if you are looking for a reliable, high-yield stock to buy to start the new year, you should do a deep dive today.

A powerful combination

Matt DiLallo (Brookfield Renewable): Brookfield Renewable generates lots of stable cash flow by selling renewable power to utilities and large corporate buyers under long-term, fixed-rate power purchase agreements (PPAs). That gives it the cash to pay a very lucrative dividend. At around 5.2%, its dividend yield is several times higher than the S&P 500's (currently about 1.2%).

The company has grown its payout at a 6% compound annual rate over the last 20 years. That trend should continue, with Brookfield targeting 5% to 9% annual dividend growth.

Brookfield should have ample fuel to achieve that target. It's benefiting from accelerating demand for renewable energy, driven by falling costs, net-zero targets, and catalysts like artificial intelligence (AI) data centers. That's pushing up power prices while driving demand for additional capacity.