How to Get Rich and Retire Early on a Passive Income From REITs

REITs could provide relatively low risks that increase the stability of a passive income and help you retire early.

Human Hand Placing A Coin On Increasing Coin Stacks In Front Of House

Image source: Getty Images

For many investors, generating a passive income that is sufficient to allow them to retire early is a major goal. While it is achievable in many cases as a result of the returns that the stock market can offer over the long run, ensuring that a passive income is sustainable and diverse is highly important.

Indeed, retiring early only to find that a passive income declines significantly would be a highly disappointing result. As such, investing in real estate investment trusts (REITs) could prove to be a worthwhile move as a result of the diversity and relatively low risks that they can offer.

Diversity

While investing directly in property has produced a generous passive income for a wide range of investors, doing so is relatively risky. For many investors, it is simply not possible to own a wide range of properties in order to reduce the potential disruption caused by factors such as void periods, tenants who fail to pay their rent and regulatory costs. As such, their property portfolio may be highly concentrated, which means they are reliant on a small number of properties for their passive income.

By contrast, REITs can offer a significant amount of diversification. This can be from their size, with many REITs owning a large number of properties, and also from their usage. In fact, a number of REITs have exposure to a variety of residential, office and retail units that, when combined, may help to offer returns that are more robust and less volatile than when purchased in isolation.

Return potential

Of course, REITs are not only appealing due to their risk profile. They also offer the potential for a relatively high income at a time when interest rates continue to be at low levels.

Therefore, their yields when compared to other income-producing assets such as cash and bonds can be relatively appealing. In many cases they may allow an investor to not only generate a generous passive income, but to also see that income rise at a faster pace than inflation over the long run.

Outlook

While the potential for capital growth from REITs may not match some sectors of the stock market such as technology, they could provide a sustainable passive income over the long run. When compounded, this could produce significant returns that increase an investor’s prospects of retiring early.

Property prices, of course, could become increasingly volatile in the near term. Furthermore, global economic uncertainty may cause the wider stock market to come under a degree of pressure.

However, such challenges may create even more enticing buying opportunities for investors seeking a passive income. By investing in REITs regularly and holding them over the long run, they may be able to provide a favourable risk/reward opportunity that increases the chances of early retirement.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

More on Dividend Stocks

Retirement
Dividend Stocks

Here’s the Average CPP Benefit at Age 60 in 2024

Dividend stocks like Royal Bank of Canada (TSX:RY) can provide passive income that supplements your CPP payments.

Read more »

Canadian Dollars
Dividend Stocks

How Investing $100 Per Week Can Create $1,500 in Annual Dividend Income

If you want high dividend income from just $100 per week, then pick up this dividend stock and keep reinvesting.…

Read more »

hand using ATM
Dividend Stocks

Should Bank of Nova Scotia or Enbridge Stock Be on Your Buy List Today?

These TSX dividend stocks trade way below their 2022 highs. Is one now undervalued?

Read more »

A meter measures energy use.
Dividend Stocks

Here’s Why Canadian Utilities Is a No-Brainer Dividend Stock

Canadian Utilities stock is down 23% in the last year. Even if it wasn’t down, it is a dividend stock…

Read more »

edit Business accounting concept, Business man using calculator with computer laptop, budget and loan paper in office.
Dividend Stocks

Got $5,000? Buy and Hold These 3 Value Stocks for Years

These essential and valuable value stocks are the perfect addition to any portfolio, especially if you have $5,000 you want…

Read more »

Growing plant shoots on coins
Dividend Stocks

3 Magnificent Ultra-High-Yield Dividend Stocks That Are Screaming Buys in April

High yield stocks like BCE (TSX:BCE) can add a lot of income to your portfolio.

Read more »

grow money, wealth build
Dividend Stocks

1 Growth Stock Down 24% to Buy Right Now

With this impressive growth stock trading more than 20% off its high, it's the perfect stock to buy right now…

Read more »

Dividend Stocks

What Should Investors Watch in Aecon Stock’s Earnings Report?

Aecon (TSX:ARE) stock has earnings coming out this week, and after disappointing fourth-quarter results, this is what investors should watch.

Read more »