Should You Buy the 3 Highest-Paying Dividend Stocks in the Nasdaq-100?

In This Article:

So, you're looking for high-yield dividend stocks. The Nasdaq-100 market index may not be the first list that springs to mind since most of its components are high-growth tech stocks. The index explicitly avoids financial companies, thereby removing one popular income-generating category from the mix.

But 58 of the 101 Nasdaq-100 stocks offer a dividend payout today -- and some really generous yields are available here. Let's take a look at the top three Nasdaq-100 yields as of Good Friday, 2025. Are they solid income stocks or distressed giants in financial trouble?

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue »

No. 3: Paccar, 4.4% yield

The tech-heavy index gets started on an industrial foot here. Paccar (NASDAQ: PCAR) makes heavy-duty trucks under the Peterbilt, DAF, and Kenworth brands. It's a surprisingly innovative company in a traditional sector, pursuing research in areas such as self-driving vehicles, engine efficiency, and performance data analytics. But it's still a surprise to see this old-school name in the context of high-tech Nasdaq-100 stocks.

Paccar does make sense on a high-yield dividend list, though. The company generates copious amounts of free cash flow, and dividends are an effective way to share the wealth with stockholders. Paccar used to lean its cash-sharing policy more toward stock buybacks, but the policy has shifted to a generous dividend-growth strategy in recent years.

So, the 4.4% yield is close to Paccar's long-term averages, fully backed by free cash flows. This high-yield payout is the real deal, and Paccar is a robust income investment with a solid dividend policy.

No. 2: Microchip Technology, 4.7% yield

Can Microchip Technology (NASDAQ: MCHP) stand up to the same analysis?

Unfortunately, this high yield is more closely related to plunging share prices than long-term dividend boosts. Microchip slowed its annual payout increase down to a symbolic 0.2% last year. Even so, the company's plunging cash flows barely covered the cost of those barely boosted payouts.

The Arizona-based maker of analog chips and microcontrollers is in full turnaround mode. Management held a special strategy call in early March to highlight the company's recovery from an inflation-based downturn. Many clients overstuffed their warehouses with Microchip components in 2022, leading up to stalled order flows in recent quarters.

The stock is trading 62% below its 52-week highs as investors anticipate a slowdown in Microchip's cash profits. However, this company might actually benefit from the tariff drama, as it has moved most of its manufacturing out of China. It maintains a smaller presence in the Middle Kingdom, but chips made in China will be shipped to customers in China, Europe, and Asia.

Waiting for permission
Allow microphone access to enable voice search

Try again.