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Dividend Kings 2026

Dividend Kings: The Complete 2026 List of 57 Elite 50+ Year Dividend Growth Champions

Only 57 out of 5,000+ U.S. stocks qualify as Dividend Kings—companies that have increased dividends for 50+ consecutive years. Discover the complete list, historical performance through 8 recessions, and why these ultra-reliable stocks deserve a place in your portfolio.

Updated: February 2026•18 min read•Expert Analysis

The Bottom Line (TL;DR)

57 Elite Companies: Only 1% of U.S. stocks qualify—50+ years of consecutive dividend increases through 8 recessions

Recession Proof: During 2008-2009 crash, Kings fell -40% vs S&P 500's -57% and recovered 1.7 years faster

Long-Term Returns: 13.2% annualized (2014-2024) with 40% lower volatility than S&P 500

Top Picks: Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Procter & Gamble (PG), Coca-Cola (KO), ADP (ADP), and Lowe's (LOW)

What Are Dividend Kings?

A Dividend King is a U.S. public company that has increased its annual dividend payment to shareholders for at least 50 consecutive years. Not maintained—increased. Every single year for half a century.

Think about what that means: These companies have grown dividends through:

  • 8 recessions (including 2008 financial crisis, dot-com bubble, 1970s stagflation)
  • Multiple market crashes (Black Monday 1987, COVID-19 2020, 2022 bear market)
  • Double-digit inflation periods
  • Industry disruptions and technological revolutions
  • Wars, pandemics, and political upheavals

Only 57 out of 5,000+ publicly traded U.S. companies currently hold this elite status. That's just over 1% of the market—rarer than getting into Harvard (3.4% acceptance rate).

The 50-Year Standard

To put 50 years in perspective: If a company became a Dividend King in 2026, it started raising dividends in 1976—when the average U.S. home cost $44,200, gas was $0.59/gallon, and the Dow Jones was at 1,000 (it's now over 44,000). These are businesses that have compounded wealth across generations.

Key Requirements

Unlike Dividend Aristocrats (which require S&P 500 membership), Dividend Kings only need to meet one criterion:

50+ consecutive years of annual dividend increases

No index membership required, no market cap minimum, no liquidity thresholds. Just relentless, unbroken dividend growth for half a century.

Complete List: All 57 Dividend Kings (2026)

Here's the complete list organized by sector. Each company has increased dividends for 50+ consecutive years:

Consumer Staples (14 Companies)

Altria Group (MO)
Archer-Daniels-Midland (ADM)
Colgate-Palmolive (CL)
Coca-Cola (KO) - 64 years
Hormel Foods (HRL)
Kimberly-Clark (KMB)
Lancaster Colony (LANC)
PepsiCo (PEP)
Procter & Gamble (PG) - 68 years
Sysco Corporation (SYY)
Target Corporation (TGT)
Tootsie Roll Industries (TR)
Universal Corporation (UVV)
Walmart (WMT)

Industrials (13 Companies)

ABM Industries (ABM)
Automatic Data Processing (ADP) - 51 years
Dover (DOV)
Emerson Electric (EMR)
Gorman-Rupp Co. (GRC)
Illinois Tool Works (ITW)
MSA Safety (MSA)
Nordson Corporation (NDSN)
Parker-Hannifin (PH)
Pentair (PNR) - Newest addition
Stanley Black & Decker (SWK)
Tennant Co. (TNC)
W.W. Grainger (GWW)

Utilities (10 Companies)

American States Water (AWR)
Black Hills Corp. (BKH)
California Water Service (CWT)
Canadian Utilities (CDUAF)
Consolidated Edison (ED) - 51 years
Fortis Inc. (FTS)
H2O America (HTO)
MGE Energy (MGEE)
Middlesex Water Company (MSEX)
Northwest Natural Holding (NWN)

Health Care (5 Companies)

Abbott Laboratories (ABT)
AbbVie Inc. (ABBV) - 52 years
Becton, Dickinson & Co. (BDX) - 54 years
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) - 62 years
Kenvue Inc. (KVUE)

Financials (6 Companies)

Commerce Bancshares (CBSH)
Cincinnati Financial (CINF)
Farmers & Merchants Bancorp (FMCB)
RLI Corp. (RLI)
S&P Global (SPGI) - 52 years
United Bankshares (UBSI)

Materials (5 Companies)

H.B. Fuller (FUL)
Nucor (NUE)
PPG Industries (PPG)
RPM International (RPM)
Stepan Co. (SCL) - 58 years

Other Sectors (4 Companies)

Consumer Discretionary (2):

Genuine Parts Company (GPC)
Lowe's Companies (LOW)

Energy (1):

National Fuel Gas (NFG)

Real Estate (1):

Federal Realty Investment Trust (FRT)

Newest Dividend King: Pentair (PNR)

Pentair, an industrial water treatment solutions company, joined the Dividend Kings in February 2026 after announcing its 50th consecutive annual dividend increase. The company exemplifies the diversified industrials that dominate the Kings list.

Dividend Kings vs. Dividend Aristocrats: What's the Difference?

Both are elite dividend growers, but there are crucial differences:

CriteriaDividend KingsDividend Aristocrats
Years of Growth Required50+ years25+ years
Number of Companies57 (1% of market)69 (1.4% of market)
Index MembershipNone requiredMust be S&P 500
Market Cap RequirementNone$3B+ (S&P 500 minimum)
Recessions Survived8 recessions4 recessions
OverlapMost Kings (45+) are also Aristocrats

Which is Better?

Choose Dividend Kings If:

You want the absolute most proven dividend track records (50+ years), don't mind smaller companies, and prioritize extreme reliability over liquidity. Kings include utilities and regional banks not in S&P 500.

Choose Dividend Aristocrats If:

You want large-cap blue chips with high liquidity, prefer S&P 500 membership, and 25 years is sufficient. Aristocrats include mega-caps like Microsoft and Apple (newer additions).

Bottom line: All Dividend Kings are exceptional. Most are also Aristocrats (both lists). If forced to choose, Kings have longer track records but Aristocrats have larger market caps and better liquidity.

Recession Performance: How Dividend Kings Hold Up in Crashes

Here's the real test: Do Dividend Kings actually protect your wealth during market crashes? The data is compelling.

2008-2009 Financial Crisis Performance

Peak-to-Trough Decline

Dividend Kings:-40.2%
S&P 500:-56.8%

Kings fell 29% less than the market

Recovery Time

Dividend Kings:3.8 years
S&P 500:5.5 years

Kings recovered 1.7 years faster

COVID-19 Crash (2020)

During the March 2020 crash, Dividend Kings again demonstrated resilience:

  • Dividend Cuts: Only 2 out of 57 Kings cut dividends (3.5% cut rate)
  • S&P 500 Cuts: Over 40% of S&P 500 companies cut or suspended dividends
  • Recovery: Kings recovered to new highs within 6 months vs 12 months for S&P 500

8 Recessions, Zero Dividend Cuts

The defining characteristic of Dividend Kings: They've survived 8 recessions since the 1970s without cutting dividends once. This includes:

  • 1973-1975: Oil crisis recession (-48% market drop)
  • 1980-1982: Double-dip recession (21% peak interest rates)
  • 1990-1991: Savings & Loan crisis
  • 2001: Dot-com bubble burst
  • 2007-2009: Great Financial Crisis (-57% market drop)
  • 2020: COVID-19 pandemic (-34% fastest crash ever)
  • 2022: Inflation/rate hike bear market (-25%)
  • 2025-2026: Ongoing economic uncertainty (TBD)

Why Kings Survive Recessions

Conservative Payout Ratios: Average 50-60% vs 75%+ for typical dividend stocks

Recession-Resistant Products: Consumer staples, utilities, healthcare—things people need regardless of economy

Strong Balance Sheets: Low debt-to-equity ratios (averaging 0.6x vs market average 1.2x)

Pricing Power: Ability to raise prices with inflation without losing customers

Why Are Dividend Kings So Special?

Beyond the obvious (50+ years of increases), Dividend Kings possess unique characteristics that make them exceptional long-term holdings:

1. Extreme Rarity = Quality Filter

Only 1% of all U.S. public companies qualify. This isn't a loose standard—it's a brutal 50-year stress test. Companies that fail get removed automatically (no committee needed).

Companies That Lost King Status (Recent Examples)

  • Stanley Black & Decker (SWK): Paused dividend growth in 2024 after 54 years due to acquisition integration
  • 3M (MMM): Would have qualified but spun off health care division, resetting the clock

Even one year of flat dividends disqualifies a company. The bar is unforgiving.

2. Compound Interest on Steroids

With 50+ years of dividend growth, these companies have turned modest investments into generational wealth:

Real Example: Procter & Gamble (PG) - 68 Years

Scenario: You invested $10,000 in P&G stock in 1980 with dividend reinvestment (DRIP).

2026 Value: ~$487,000

Annual Dividend Income: ~$11,200/year (14% yield-on-cost)

Total Return: 4,770%

Source: Morningstar total return data, assumes DRIP

3. Inflation Protection Built-In

Dividend Kings have averaged ~5% annual dividend growth over the past decade, outpacing average inflation of 2-3%. Your income rises faster than your cost of living.

4. Lower Volatility Than Market

Dividend Kings deliver similar long-term returns to the S&P 500 but with 40% lower volatility. This means:

  • Smaller drawdowns during crashes (sleep better at night)
  • Faster recovery times (get back to even quicker)
  • Less emotional stress (easier to hold long-term)

5. Shareholder-Friendly Management

Companies that prioritize 50+ years of dividend growth aren't chasing get-rich-quick schemes. They have disciplined capital allocation, conservative balance sheets, and long-term thinking.

Best Dividend Kings to Buy in 2026

Not all Dividend Kings are equal. Here are our top 5 picks based on growth potential, yield, financial strength, and valuation:

1. Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)

62 years of dividend growth • Health Care

Top Pick

Current Yield

3.0%

5-Yr Dividend Growth

5.8%/year

Payout Ratio

44%

Why we like it: Healthcare giant with diversified revenue (pharma, medical devices, consumer health). Recently spun off Kenvue (consumer brands) to focus on higher-margin pharmaceuticals. Strong pipeline of drugs, recession-resistant demand, and one of the highest credit ratings (AAA).

Risk: Patent cliffs, litigation (talc lawsuits), regulatory pressure on drug pricing.

2. Procter & Gamble (PG)

68 years of dividend growth • Consumer Staples

Reliable

Current Yield

2.4%

5-Yr Dividend Growth

6.2%/year

Payout Ratio

58%

Why we like it: Ultimate consumer staples play—owns brands like Tide, Pampers, Gillette, Crest. People buy these products in good times and bad. Strong pricing power, global distribution, and consistent earnings growth. One of Warren Buffett's favorite holdings.

Risk: Mature markets, private label competition, slower growth in developed markets.

3. Coca-Cola (KO)

64 years of dividend growth • Consumer Staples

Global

Current Yield

3.1%

5-Yr Dividend Growth

4.1%/year

Payout Ratio

73%

Why we like it: Global beverage empire with 500+ brands and distribution in 200+ countries. Recession-proof demand, pricing power, and transition to healthier beverages (water, tea, sports drinks). Warren Buffett's largest holding in Berkshire Hathaway.

Risk: Declining soda consumption in developed markets, health concerns, higher payout ratio limits growth.

4. Automatic Data Processing (ADP)

51 years of dividend growth • Industrials

Growth

Current Yield

2.2%

5-Yr Dividend Growth

12.4%/year

Payout Ratio

56%

Why we like it: Payroll processing leader with sticky recurring revenue (90%+ client retention). Benefits from every new job created in the economy. High margins (20%+), strong cash flow, and fastest dividend growth among our top picks. Tech-adjacent without tech volatility.

Risk: Competition from newer HR tech platforms, cyclical exposure to employment trends.

5. Lowe's Companies (LOW)

63 years of dividend growth • Consumer Discretionary

Value

Current Yield

2.0%

5-Yr Dividend Growth

15.1%/year

Payout Ratio

37%

Why we like it: Home improvement retailer benefiting from aging housing stock (median home age: 40 years) and millennials buying houses. Aggressive share buybacks, improving margins, and massive dividend growth runway (lowest payout ratio in our top 5).

Risk: Housing market slowdowns, competition from Amazon/Home Depot, cyclical consumer spending.

Honorable Mentions

Abbott Laboratories (ABT)

Medical devices, diagnostics, nutrition. 51 years. Yield: 2.0%

PepsiCo (PEP)

Snacks + beverages (Frito-Lay, Gatorade). 52 years. Yield: 2.9%

Consolidated Edison (ED)

NYC utility monopoly. 51 years. Yield: 3.2%

Emerson Electric (EMR)

Industrial automation. 68 years. Yield: 2.2%

Risks & Downsides of Dividend Kings

Dividend Kings aren't perfect. Here are the legitimate risks and downsides:

1. Lower Growth Than Tech/Growth Stocks

From 2014-2024, Dividend Kings returned 13.2% annualized vs 15.8% for Nasdaq (heavy tech exposure). If you want maximum capital appreciation, Kings lag high-growth stocks.

2. Sector Concentration

47% of Kings are in Consumer Staples and Utilities—defensive sectors with slower growth. Only 1 energy company, 1 real estate, 0 tech pure-plays. You're overweight boring, underweight exciting.

3. Dividend Traps Exist

Just because a company raised dividends for 50 years doesn't mean it will for 51. Altria (tobacco) faces existential regulatory risk. Stanley Black & Decker paused growth in 2024. Past ≠ guaranteed future.

4. Tax Inefficiency in Taxable Accounts

Dividends are taxable income (15-20% for most investors). If held in taxable accounts, you pay taxes annually even if reinvesting. Growth stocks defer taxes until you sell.

5. Illiquidity in Smaller Names

Not all Kings are S&P 500 companies. Smaller utilities and regional banks (Middlesex Water, Farmers & Merchants Bancorp) have low trading volume. Spreads can be wide.

6. Valuation Risk

Dividend Kings trade at premium P/E ratios (average 22x vs S&P 500's 20x) due to their quality reputation. If you overpay, even great companies deliver mediocre returns.

Bottom line: Dividend Kings are excellent for stability, income, and recession protection. They're NOT ideal for aggressive growth, tax efficiency in taxable accounts, or tech exposure. Know what you're buying.

How to Invest in Dividend Kings

You have three main approaches to gain exposure to Dividend Kings:

Option 1: Buy Individual Stocks

Best For: Investors with $25,000+ who want control

Strategy: Build a diversified portfolio of 10-20 Dividend Kings across sectors. Focus on our top picks plus your own research.

Pros: Full control, no fees, tax-loss harvesting, higher yields

Cons: Requires research, rebalancing, and concentration risk if under-diversified

Option 2: Dividend Aristocrats ETF (Proxy for Kings)

Best For: Passive investors who want instant diversification

Note: There's no ETF exclusively tracking Dividend Kings. The closest proxy is:

ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF (NOBL)

Yield

2.1%

Expense Ratio

0.35%

Holdings

69 stocks

Tracks S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats (25+ years). Most Dividend Kings are included.

Pros: Instant diversification, automatic rebalancing, no research needed

Cons: 0.35% fee, lower yield than individual stocks, includes 25-year Aristocrats (not just 50-year Kings)

Option 3: Hybrid Approach (Recommended)

Best For: Most investors seeking balance

60% NOBL ETF (Core Holdings)
Stability

Provides diversification across all Dividend Aristocrats/Kings

40% Individual Dividend Kings (Satellite)
Higher Yield

5-8 hand-picked Kings (JNJ, PG, KO, ADP, LOW, etc.) for higher yields

Why This Works:

  • NOBL provides diversification and autopilot management
  • Individual stocks boost overall yield and let you overweight favorites
  • Balanced approach = better risk-adjusted returns

Getting Started Checklist

  1. Choose a brokerage with commission-free stock/ETF trades (see our recommendations below)
  2. Fund your account with at least $1,000 to start (ideally $10,000+ for diversification)
  3. Enable DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Plan) to automatically buy more shares with dividends
  4. Start with 1-3 positions from our top picks, then add over time (dollar-cost average)
  5. Rebalance annually or when a position exceeds 15% of portfolio
  6. Hold for decades—Dividend Kings reward patience (10+ year time horizon)

Model Your Dividend King Returns with DRIP Calculator

See how reinvesting dividends from Dividend Kings can compound into generational wealth. Our DRIP calculator shows exact projections based on historical dividend growth rates.

Best Brokers for Buying Dividend Kings

To invest in Dividend Kings, you need a brokerage account with commission-free stock trading and DRIP support. Here are the top-rated brokers:

Affiliate Disclosure

We may earn a commission when you open an account through links on this page. This doesn't affect our rankings or reviews. All opinions are our own based on extensive research and user feedback.

Best Brokers for Dividend Investing

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M1 Finance

4.8 (12,500 reviews)

Best for: DRIP Investors & Automated Portfolios

Featured Partner

Min Deposit

$100

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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Betterment

4.7 (15,200 reviews)

Best for: Beginner Dividend Investors

Featured Partner

Min Deposit

$0

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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Fidelity Investments

4.7 (42,000 reviews)

Best for: Research & Retirement Accounts

Featured Partner

Min Deposit

$0

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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Wealthfront

4.6 (8,900 reviews)

Best for: Automated Dividend Portfolios

Featured Partner

Min Deposit

$500

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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Charles Schwab

4.6 (38,500 reviews)

Best for: Full-Service Investing

Featured Partner

Min Deposit

$0

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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TD Ameritrade

4.6 (32,000 reviews)

Best for: Research & Education

Min Deposit

$0

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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Public.com

4.5 (9,200 reviews)

Best for: Social Investing

Min Deposit

$0

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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E*TRADE

4.5 (28,000 reviews)

Best for: Options & Active Trading

Min Deposit

$0

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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Vanguard

4.5 (25,000 reviews)

Best for: Long-Term Buy & Hold

Min Deposit

$0

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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Webull

4.4 (18,500 reviews)

Best for: Active Traders

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$0

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DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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Interactive Brokers

4.3 (15,000 reviews)

Best for: International & Advanced Traders

Min Deposit

$0

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Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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SoFi Invest

4.3 (11,000 reviews)

Best for: All-in-One Financial App

Min Deposit

$0

Commission-Free

Fractional Shares

DRIP

Int'l Stocks

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Robinhood

4.2 (35,000 reviews)

Best for: Commission-Free Trading

Min Deposit

$0

Commission-Free

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DRIP

Int'l Stocks

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

How many Dividend Kings are there?

As of February 2026, there are 57 Dividend Kings (including 2 unofficial Kings that qualify depending on methodology). The list changes annually as companies reach 50 years or lose their streak.

What's the difference between Dividend Kings and Aristocrats?

Kings: 50+ years of dividend growth, no index requirement (57 stocks).
Aristocrats: 25+ years of dividend growth, must be in S&P 500 (69 stocks).
Most Dividend Kings are also Aristocrats, but Kings have double the track record.

What is the average dividend yield of Dividend Kings?

The average yield is approximately 2.8-3.2%, slightly higher than the S&P 500 average (1.4%) but lower than high-yield dividend stocks (5-7%). Kings prioritize dividend growth over high initial yields.

Can Dividend Kings cut dividends?

Yes. While extremely rare, Dividend Kings can and have cut/paused dividends. Examples: Stanley Black & Decker paused growth in 2024. However, during COVID-19 (2020), only 2 out of 57 Kings cut dividends (3.5% rate) vs 40%+ of S&P 500 companies.

Are Dividend Kings good for retirement income?

Yes. Dividend Kings are excellent for retirement portfolios because: (1) reliable income that grows with inflation, (2) lower volatility than market, (3) recession-tested for 50+ years, and (4) minimal maintenance required. Ideal for retirees who need predictable cash flow.

Which Dividend King has the longest streak?

Procter & Gamble (PG) holds the longest streak at 68 consecutive years of dividend increases (as of 2026). Close behind are Emerson Electric (EMR) at 68 years and Coca-Cola (KO) at 64 years.

Should I buy Dividend Kings or a dividend ETF?

It depends on your portfolio size and preferences:
Individual Kings: Best if you have $25,000+, want higher yields, and enjoy stock picking.
Dividend ETF (NOBL): Best for passive investors, smaller portfolios ($1,000-25,000), and those who want instant diversification.
Hybrid (recommended): 60% ETF + 40% individual Kings combines benefits of both.