My Top REIT to Buy in 2025 for Passive Income

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Last year was another challenging one for the commercial real estate sector. While the Federal Reserve started reducing interest rates, it didn't cut them as fast as the market expected due to stubbornly high inflation. Higher rates acted as a headwind for the sector, impacting property values and the ability of real estate investors to borrow money to fund new real estate deals.

As a result, the average real estate investment trust (REIT) delivered a meager return last year. The S&P U.S. REIT Index only gained 4.3%, significantly underperforming the S&P 500's 25% total return.

Despite the sector's poor performance in recent years, REITs have outperformed stocks over the longer term. That's one of the many reasons why I've continued to buy more shares of several REITs over the past few years. I plan to continue doing so in 2025. My top REIT to buy this year is Realty Income (NYSE: O). It has been a prodigious passive income producer over the years, contributing to its strong total returns over the long term. Those are some of the many reasons why I think it's the top REIT to buy this year.

The name says it all

Realty Income has been an income-generating machine over the years. The REIT has paid 654 consecutive monthly dividends. It has increased its payment 128 times since its public market listing in 1994, which includes the last 109 quarters in a row. Overall, Realty Income has delivered 30 consecutive annual years of increasing its dividend. It has grown its payout at a 4.2% compound annual rate over that period.

That growing stream of dividend income has really added up over the years. For example, an investor who purchased 100 shares of Realty Income at the end of 2013 would have invested $3,730 into the stock. They would have received a cumulative $3,077 in dividends by the end of the third quarter. That's 82% of their original investment paid back in a little more than a decade. Meanwhile, their current annual dividend income stream would be $308, a 40% increase from the $219 of dividend income they would have collected their first year. Their yield on cost has grown from 5.9% when they initially bought shares to 8.2%.

Realty Income's dividend yield is currently over 6%, due in part to the roughly 18% decline in its share price from its recent peak. That high-yielding payout (the S&P 500's dividend yield is around 1.2%) is on a very sustainable foundation. The REIT has a conservative dividend payout ratio (around 75% of its adjusted funds from operations). It also has one of the strongest balance sheets in the REIT sector (it's one of eight REITs with two A3/A- credit ratings or better). Those factors give it significant financial flexibility to continue paying dividends.