1 No-Brainer Dividend Index Fund to Buy Right Now for Less Than $500 -- and Another Dividend Fund Yielding 11%

Key Points

Two of the best things in the investment world are index funds and dividend-paying stocks. So an even better thing, arguably, would be a dividend-focused index fund. Here's a look at a well-regarded index exchange-traded fund (ETF) that recently boasted a yield of 4%. (ETFs are funds that trade like stocks, making it easy to get in and out of them.)

I'll also offer for your consideration a more aggressive income-oriented ETF that recently sported a dividend yield of 11%. Check them out and see whether either or both would be a good fit for your portfolio. You can invest in either with less than $500 -- or with more.

1 No-Brainer Dividend Index Fund to Buy Right Now for Less Than $500 -- and Another Dividend Fund Yielding 11%

Appreciating dividend payers

Dividend-paying stocks used to be thought of by many people as mainly suitable for grandparents -- but that's increasingly not the case as more investors wake up to their appeal. Consider these eye-opening numbers.

Dividend-Paying Status

Average Annual Total Return, 1973-2024

Dividend growers and initiators

10.24%

Dividend payers

9.20%

No change in dividend policy

6.75%

Dividend non-payers

4.31%

Dividend shrinkers and eliminators

(0.89%)

Equal-weighted S&P 500 index

7.65%

Data source: Ned Davis Research and Hartford Funds.

You can, of course, study the universe of stocks and carefully choose promising dividend-paying stocks for your portfolio. But you might instead make it easy on yourself by just investing in a good fund that does that work for you.

Meet the Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF

The Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEMKT: SCHD) is a compelling pick for multiple reasons. Let's start with its expense ratio (annual fee), which is just 0.06%. That means you'll only pay $6 a year for every $10,000 you have invested in the fund.

The ETF tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Dividend 100 Index -- which encompasses 100 stocks with track records of paying dividends for at least 10 years and which also appear financially healthy. That last part, based on factors such as cash flow to total debt and return on equity, is important, because companies that aren't financially healthy may at some point need to reduce their dividends.

Here's how the fund has performed in the past.

OK