Skip to headerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
Get our Free E-newslettersGet our Free E-newsletters
Link to homepage
Get our Free E-newslettersGet our Free E-newsletters
Subscribe to Kiplinger
Save up to 76%
Subscribe
Subscribe to Kiplinger
  • Store
  • Home
  • Investing
  • Retirement
  • Taxes
  • Personal Finance
  • Your Business
  • Wealth Creation
  • More
    • Podcasts
    • Economic Outlooks
    • Tools
  • My Kiplinger
    • Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine
    • The Kiplinger Letter
    • The Kiplinger Tax Letter
    • Kiplinger's Investing for Income
    • Kiplinger's Retirement Report
    • Store
    • Manage My E-Newsletters
    • My Subscriptions
  • Home
  • investing
  • stocks
stocks

12 Dividend Stocks You Can Buy and Hold Forever

Members of Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index that have raised cash payments to stockholders 25 years in a row are known as dividend aristocrats.

by: Jeffrey R. Kosnett
February 24, 2017

Courtesy Church & Dwight

Members of Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index that have raised cash payments to stockholders 25 years in a row are known as dividend aristocrats. The title dividend champions goes to U.S. stocks, regardless of size, with 25 consecutive increases. There are 105 champions, a handful of which are working to extend more than 60 years of increases. But some U.S. businesses have been doling out cash to public stockholders for longer than six decades. Much longer, in fact. So Kiplinger now presents the dividend centenarians.

We identified a dozen investments that have paid cash dividends annually for at least a century. That’s not to say they’ve granted raises every year for 100 years. But some have never cut their dividend. Most of these companies have humble, workshop-floor origins, but they are not quaint. Most have evolved over their long histories into enormous, multifaceted, worldwide enterprises, providing great growth as well as dividends. Take a look at this intriguing list of income stocks. Some of the names might surprise you.

Stocks are listed in order of the year when each company paid its initial dividend, starting with the oldest. Current yields are based on the latest dividend, and share prices are as of May 25. Analysts' stock ratings provided by Thomson Reuters. Research assistance to identify the companies paying dividends for 100 years or more provided by Dividend.com.

Sponsored Content

Advertisement - Article continues below

1 of 12

York Water Company

Courtesy York Water Company

  • Symbol: YORW
  • Dividends paid since: 1815
  • Current yield: 2.2%
  • Last increase: 4.0%, declared in November 2015
  • Analysts’ opinion: 0 strong buy, 0 buy, 0 hold, 1 underperform, 0 sell
  • TAKE THE QUIZ: How Well Do You Know Your Dividends?

This small water utility serving York, Pa., and surrounding towns, whose sign and scenic reservoir, Lake Redman, are landmarks along Interstate 83, has been paying cash since James Madison was president. There’s no evidence that he was a shareholder.

Advertisement - Article continues below

2 of 12

Stanley Black & Decker

Mark Hunter via Flickr

  • Symbol: SWK
  • Dividends paid since: 1877
  • Current yield: 1.9%
  • Last increase: 5.8%, July 2015
  • Analysts’ opinion: 3 strong buy, 5 buy, 12 hold, 0 underperform, 0 sell
  • SEE ALSO: Best Dividend Stocks of the S&P 500

Founded as a bolt and hand-tool company in pre-Civil-War Connecticut, Stanley acquired Black & Decker in 2010 and is now big in sophisticated stuff such as electronic security systems and secure hospital supply storage units.

Sponsored Content

Advertisement - Article continues below

3 of 12

ExxonMobil

Thinkstock

  • Symbol: XOM
  • Dividends paid since: 1882
  • Current yield: 3.3%
  • Last increase: 2.7%, April 2016
  • Analysts’ opinion: 3 strong buy, 6 buy, 9 hold, 5 underperform, 2 sell
  • SEE ALSO: 8 Energy Stocks That Could Make You Rich

Descended from the original Standard Oil Trust controlled by John D. Rockefeller, ExxonMobil shows no signs of turning off the dividend spigot despite the downturn in oil prices.

Advertisement - Article continues below

4 of 12

Eli Lilly

Courtesy Eli Lilly

  • Symbol: LLY
  • Dividends paid since: 1885
  • Current yield: 2.7%
  • Last increase: 2.0%, December 2015
  • Analysts’ opinion: 7 strong buy, 9 buy, 6 hold, 0 underperform, 0 sell

Lilly, a research-oriented drug company that has never dabbled much in anything else, closed 2015 up 25%. Despite a 9.8% loss so far in 2016, it has an annualized 17.1% total return since 2010. Its current diabetes, cancer and pain drugs, plus Prozac, weren’t on Lilly’s menu in its early days, but it made a name for itself by offering the first widely available prescription insulin.

Sponsored Content

Advertisement - Article continues below

5 of 12

Consolidated Edison

Courtesy Consolidated Edison

  • Symbol: ED
  • Dividends paid since: 1885
  • Current yield: 3.7%
  • Last increase: 3.1%, January 2016
  • Analysts’ opinion: 0 strong buy, 0 buy, 11 hold, 5 underperform, 1 sell
  • SEE ALSO: 7 Good Utility Stocks Paying Steady Dividends

Utilities have been a splendid source of dividends for 130 years, thanks in no small part to New York City’s power company. ConEd is also working on a streak of 42 straight annual raises. (Wall Street analysts often sneer at utilities although they have been splendid investments. So view those low opinions with a high degree of skepticism).

Advertisement - Article continues below

6 of 12

UGI

Thinkstock

  • Symbol: UGI
  • Dividends paid since: 1885
  • Current yield: 2.2%
  • Last increase: 4.4%, April 2016
  • Analysts’ opinion: 1 strong buy, 0 buy, 4 hold, 0 underperform, 0 sell

UGI is a variegated energy company whose main businesses are Pennsylvania natural gas utilities and the distribution of propane in the U.S. and Europe. Although its shares ended 2015 down 8.7% after substantial declines in the shares of some companies with similar holdings, it’s up 29% so far in 2016.

Sponsored Content

Advertisement - Article continues below

7 of 12

Johnson Controls

Courtesy Johnson Controls

  • Symbol: JCI
  • Dividends paid since: 1887
  • Current yield: 2.6%
  • Last increase: 11.5%, November 2015
  • Analysts’ opinion: 5 strong buy, 4 buy, 9 hold, 0 underperform, 0 sell

Johnson Controls is a wild stock, known for 40% calendar-year gains followed by extended periods of weakness. It should become more stable this year as it completes spinning off its automotive parts businesses, leaving Johnson with energy-efficiency and security systems for commercial buildings.

Advertisement - Article continues below

8 of 12

Procter & Gamble

Thinkstock

  • Symbol: PG
  • Dividends paid since: 1891
  • Current yield: 3.3%
  • Last increase: 1.0%, April 2016
  • Analysts’ opinion: 5 strong buy, 5 buy, 11 hold, 2 underperform, 0 sell
  • SEE ALSO: 7 Great Stocks That Keep Raising Dividends

Ignore 2015’s negative results for P&G stock—it ended the year with a very rare 9.9% loss—and note instead its 60-year streak of increased dividends. P&G is eliminating many slow-growing product offerings to try to get its shares moving again. So far in 2016, its shares are up 3.6%

Sponsored Content

Advertisement - Article continues below

9 of 12

Colgate-Palmolive

Thinkstock

  • Symbol: CL
  • Dividends paid since: 1895
  • Current yield: 2.2%
  • Last increase: 2.6%, March 2016
  • Analysts’ opinion: 1 strong buy, 3 buy, 19 hold, 0 underperform, 0 sell

Household cleanser, mouthwash, toothpaste and soap are perennial sellers, so Colgate marches along, slowly but reliably, with predictable dividend boosts of 1 to 2 cents a year.

Advertisement - Article continues below

10 of 12

General Mills

Thinkstock

  • Symbol: GIS
  • Dividends paid since: 1898
  • Current yield: 2.9%
  • Last increase: 4.5%, March 2016
  • Analysts’ opinion: 2 strong buy, 2 buy, 12 hold, 3 underperform, 0 sell
  • SEE ALSO: 8 Best Dividend Stocks of the Dow

There’s big money in flour and cereal. General Mills is a reliable dividend raiser, with boosts of 17% in 2011 and 2014. This year’s hike is lower because the company’s enormous overseas business brings in currencies that are presently worth fewer dollars, given the strength of the buck. But General Mills is still a powerhouse that has never even once cut its dividend.

Sponsored Content

Advertisement - Article continues below

11 of 12

PPG Industries

Thinkstock

  • Symbol: PPG
  • Dividends paid since: 1899
  • Current yield: 1.5%
  • Last increase: 11.1%, April 2016
  • Analysts’ opinion: 6 strong buy, 11 buy, 3 hold, 0 underperform, 0 sell

PPG stands for Pittsburgh Plate Glass, but the company makes way more money now from coatings, paints and chemicals than from glass. Lately, PPG has advanced from a 3% dividend raiser to 7% and up. It's one of the reasons we recently named PPG a great dividend stock for retirement.

Advertisement - Article continues below

12 of 12

Church & Dwight

Courtesy Church & Dwight

  • Symbol: CHD
  • Dividends paid since: 1901
  • Current yield: 1.5%
  • Last increase: 8.1%, January 2015
  • Analysts’ opinion: 2 strong buy, 3 buy, 10 hold, 4 underperform, 0 sell
  • SEE ALSO: 12 Stocks to Earn Dividends Every Month

The maker of Arm & Hammer, Oxi-Clean and Trojans products is one of a few rare stocks to generate double-digit total returns every year from 2010 to 2014. High profit margins underwrite brisk dividend boosts, too: 7% and up every year since 2010.

Sponsored Content

Advertisement - Article continues below
  • stocks
  • bonds
  • dividend stocks
  • Investing for Income

Recommended

Bonds: 10 Things You Need to Know
Investing for Income

Bonds: 10 Things You Need to Know

Bonds can be more complex than stocks, but it's not hard to become a knowledgeable fixed-income investor.
July 22, 2020
13 Dividend Stocks That Have Paid Investors for 100+ Years
stocks

13 Dividend Stocks That Have Paid Investors for 100+ Years

Here are 13 dividend stocks that each boast a rich history of uninterrupted payouts to shareholders that stretch back at least a century.
May 21, 2020
Stock Market Today 3/3/21: Crash? Not Today. But Stocks Still Feel Pain.
Stock Market Today

Stock Market Today 3/3/21: Crash? Not Today. But Stocks Still Feel Pain.

A small rise in weekly jobless claims and comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell sparked a scare in stocks Thursday, though the losses could've been wo…
March 4, 2021
Stock Market Today 3/3/21: Growth Stocks Gashed
Stock Market Today

Stock Market Today 3/3/21: Growth Stocks Gashed

A stingier stimulus measure, conflicting news on the COVID front and upward creep in interest rates helped send growthier stocks to the cleaners Wedne…
March 4, 2021

Most Popular

Where's My Refund? How to Track Your Tax Refund Status
tax refunds

Where's My Refund? How to Track Your Tax Refund Status

If you're waiting for your tax refund, the IRS has an online tool that lets you track the status of your payment.
March 2, 2021
Will Your Stimulus Check Increase Your Tax on Social Security Benefits?
Coronavirus and Your Money

Will Your Stimulus Check Increase Your Tax on Social Security Benefits?

The answer to this question comes down to whether your stimulus check increases your "provisional income."
March 1, 2021
Your Guide to Roth Conversions
Special Report
Tax Breaks

Your Guide to Roth Conversions

A Kiplinger Special Report
February 25, 2021
  • Customer Service
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us (PDF)
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Kiplinger Careers
  • Accessibility

Subscribe to Kiplinger's Personal Finance

Be a smarter, better informed investor.
Save up to 76%Subscribe to Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Link to Dennis Publishing Ltd website

The Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc., is part of the Dennis Publishing Ltd. Group.
All Contents © 2021, The Kiplinger Washington Editors

Follow us on InstagramFollow us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterConnect on LinkedInConnect on YouTube
Advertisement