All It Takes Is $3,500 Invested in Each of These 3 Dow Dividend Stocks to Help Generate $325 in Passive Income in 2025

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With 2024 nearly over, the Dow Jones Industrial Average will almost certainly underperform the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite for the year. Over the last five years, the Dow has produced a respectable 68.2% total return, but that's quite a bit lower than the S&P 500's 102.8% or the Nasdaq's 132.7% total return during that period.

Still, Dow stocks can be solid buys for folks looking for quality, blue chip companies that pay dividends. Many Dow stocks are industry leaders and have proven track records for growing earnings. Because these companies are more valued for what they are today rather than for what they could become in the future, they can be less volatile when investors are less willing to pay up for growth stocks.

Folks looking to generate passive income from Dow stocks may want to take a closer look at dividend stocks McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), The Home Depot (NYSE: HD), and Chevron (NYSE: CVX). Investing $3,500 into each Dow stock should help generate just over $325 in passive income in 2025 -- and likely even more dividend income in the future -- if all three companies continue to raise their payouts every year. Here's why all three companies are balanced buys now.

Person moving a piece of lumber off a shelf at a home improvement store.
Image source: Getty Images.

The McDonald's rewards program can help the company kick into a new growth gear

McDonald's has a unique business model where it owns and operates around just 5% of its stores and franchises the rest. McDonald's collects royalties and rent from its franchisees, and in turn, they get to participate in a global brand. The more franchises that buy into the system, the faster McDonald's can expand globally.

But McDonald's has been in a bit of a sales funk lately. The company reported flat systemwide sales in the recent quarter, just a 2% increase in consolidated revenue on a constant currency basis, and a 1% decrease in diluted earnings per share. Systemwide sales refer to sales from all restaurants, which provides a good reading on how the company's over 40,000 locations are performing. McDonald's corporate doesn't collect systemwide sales, but instead books revenue from its owned and operated stores and franchise fees.

McDonald's responded to inflationary pressures with price increases, which received customer pushback in recent quarters. It also faced an E. coli outbreak in October, which damaged sales. The outbreak's effect will be reflected in McDonald's upcoming quarterly results.

Despite the challenges, McDonald's remains a compelling investment opportunity for patient investors. The company has raised its dividend for 48 consecutive years and yields 2.4%. The price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is at 25.8 -- slightly below the five-year median P/E of 26.5 -- indicating that McDonald's is a decent value.