Quick Read
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A $250,000 position in Realty Income (O) throws off more than $13,000 a year.
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Held in a taxable brokerage, over $3,000 of that goes straight to the IRS every year. Held in a Roth, zero does.
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At the 24% federal bracket, a $250,000 position in Realty Income (NYSE: O) throws off roughly $13,150 a year at the current 5.3% yield. Held in a taxable brokerage, about $3,156 of that goes straight to the IRS every year. Held in a Roth, zero does. That is the entire premise of this article.
Why Realty Income Is a Textbook Roth Holding
Real estate investment trust (REIT) distributions are non-qualified ordinary income. They are taxed at your marginal bracket, full stop, with no access to the 15% or 20% qualified-dividend rate. Realty Income has now declared 671 consecutive monthly dividends and posted its 114th consecutive quarterly increase, with a monthly payout of $0.2705 and an annualized rate of $3.246. That is a high-frequency, fully taxable income stream. The Roth wrapper is the difference between keeping all of it and giving a chunk back every April.
The Tax Delta: Roth Versus Taxable at the 24% Bracket
Using the current yield of 5.3% and the 24% bracket (single filers with income over $105,700, married filing jointly over $211,400 for 2026):
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|
Position Size |
Gross Annual Dividend |
Net in Taxable (24%) |
Net in Roth |
Annual Roth Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
$50,000 |
$2,630 |
$1,999 |
$2,630 |
$631 |
|
$100,000 |
$5,260 |
$3,998 |
$5,260 |
$1,262 |
|
$250,000 |
$13,150 |
$9,994 |
$13,150 |
$3,156 |
On the $250K tier, that represents a $31,560 cumulative 10-year advantage before any compounding, based solely on account placement.
The Bracket Multiplier
The same $100,000 Realty Income position, generating $5,260 in gross dividends, produces dramatically different after-tax outcomes depending on bracket.
|
Bracket |
Tax Owed (Taxable) |
Net in Taxable |
Roth Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
|
22% |
$1,157 |
$4,103 |
$1,157 |
|
24% |
$1,262 |
$3,998 |
$1,262 |
|
32% |
$1,683 |
$3,577 |
$1,683 |
|
37% |
$1,946 |
$3,314 |
$1,946 |
A 37% bracket investor loses nearly twice as much per year on the same shares as a 22% bracket investor. The higher the bracket, the more urgent the Roth placement.
The Insight Most Readers Miss
The Roth advantage compounds: that delta reinvested into more Realty Income shares generates more monthly dividends, all tax-free. On a $250,000 position at the 24% bracket, the $3,156 annual delta reinvested monthly at the current 5.27% yield approaches roughly $41,000 over 10 years and north of $110,000 over 20 years before any share-price appreciation. That is the permanent, realized cost of holding Realty Income outside a Roth. Monthly compounding matters here. Realty Income pays 12 times per year versus four for most blue-chip dividend payers, so reinvested distributions begin earning their own dividends a quarter sooner.
