3 High-Yield Utility Stocks to Buy to Create Years of Passive Income

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Black Hills is small and boring, but it has a monster 55 year long dividend streak and a 4.4% yield.

  • Dominion offers a high dividend yield today and growth potential in the future.

  • Duke Energy operates in regions with strong growth potential.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Dominion Energy ›

The utility sector has been a sleepy industry over the years. These companies generate very stable earnings backed by government-regulated rate structures. Because governments set rates, utilities don't grow that fast.

However, these companies tend to generate lots of stable income, which gives them money to pay lucrative dividends. Black Hills (NYSE: BKH), Dominion (NYSE: D), and Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK) currently stand out to a few Fool.com contributors for their high-yielding payouts. Here's why they believe these utility stocks could help you generate years of passive income.

A person wearing a hardhat and holding a laptop near a power line.
Image source: Getty Images.

Black Hills is a Dividend King with a lofty yield

Reuben Gregg Brewer (Black Hills): Getting into the elite ranks of Dividend Kings is an impressive feat. It requires a strong business model that gets executed in good times and bad. Black Hills is one of the few utilities that has achieved Dividend King status despite being an industry small fry with a market cap of only around $4.5 billion. But that's not all that sets it apart from the pack today.

Black Hills' dividend yield is roughly 4.4%. That is far above the 1.3% or so yield on offer from the S&P 500 Index (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) and the 2.9% of the average utility. So not only is Black Hills a Dividend King but it also has a relatively attractive yield.

What's the catch?

There's really no catch. Black Hills is just small and underfollowed. In fact, the utility's customer base has been growing at nearly three times the rate of the U.S. population. That's pretty attractive and suggests that Black Hills should continue to have its investment plans and rates approved by regulators. That, in turn, should allow this Dividend King to live up to its long-term goal of 4% to 6% earnings growth, with dividends likely to grow at a similar rate.

To be fair, Black Hills isn't going to be an exciting stock to own. But it is the kind of high yield utility you buy if you want to create years of reliable passive income.

Income stability and then growth

Matt DiLallo (Dominion): Dominion Energy provides electricity to millions of customers across Virginia and the Carolinas. Demand for power in those places is surging, driven by economic growth, increased electrification, and data center expansion. Virginia, in particular, is a hotbed of data center developments.