2 TSX Dividend Stocks to Start a TFSA Income Portfolio

These stocks have great track records of delivering dividend growth, even during challenging economic conditions.

| More on:
protect, safe, trust

Image source: Getty Images

Pensioners and other investors are using their self-directed Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) to build stock portfolios that can generate steady and growing passive income to complement government and company pensions.

With the TSX sitting near its record high and economic uncertainty on the horizon, it makes sense to seek out top dividend-growth stocks that can raise their distributions in all economic conditions.

Fortis

Fortis (TSX:FTS) increased its dividend in each of the past 51years. That’s right, the company gave investors a raise through the Black Friday crash, the dotcom crash, the subprime financial crisis, and the pandemic.

Fortis operates $75 billion in utility assets located across Canada, the United States, and the Caribbean. Businesses in the portfolio include power generation sites, electricity transmission grids, and natural gas distribution utilities. Companies and households need to use electricity and natural gas regardless of the state of the economy. Revenue is rate-regulated, so the cash flow tends to be predictable and reliable.

Fortis hasn’t made a large acquisition for several years, but continues to drive growth through a substantial capital program. The current $26 billion development portfolio will raise the rate base from $39 billion in 2024 to $53 billion in 2029. As the new assets are completed and go into service, the company expects earnings to increase enough to support planned annual dividend growth of 4% to 6% over the coming five years. Fortis has other projects under consideration that could get added to the mix. This would potentially boost the size of the dividend increases, or extend the dividend-growth guidance.

Investors who buy FTS stock at the current level can pick up a dividend yield of 3.8%. The company has a dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP) that provides a 2% discount on stock purchased using the dividends.

Enbridge

Enbridge (TSX:ENB) is a giant in the energy infrastructure and utility sectors. The company is arguably best known for its extensive oil pipeline and oil export operations, which move 30% of the oil produced in Canada and the United States. The export terminal in Texas is a key link for producers to ship to international buyers. Renewed interest in oil pipelines in Canada could lead to new growth projects for Enbridge in the segment.

On the natural gas side, Enbridge spent US$14 billion in 2024 to buy three natural gas utilities in the United States. The deals further diversified the revenue stream, while making Enbridge the largest operator of natural gas utilities in North America. Natural gas demand is expected to rise in the coming years as gas-fired power generation facilities are built to provide electricity for hundreds of new AI data centres.

Enbridge is working on a $28 billion capital program that will help drive earnings and distributable cash flow growth in the next few years. This should support ongoing dividend hikes. Enbridge raised the dividend in each of the past 30 years.

The stock is off the 2025 high, so there is an opportunity to buy on a modest dip. At the time of writing, investors can get a dividend yield of 6.1%.

The Motley Fool recommends Enbridge and Fortis. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Fool contributor Andrew Walker has no position in any stock mentioned.

More on Dividend Stocks

Canadian Dollars bills
Dividend Stocks

The TFSA Paycheque Plan: How $10,000 Can Start Paying You in 2026

A TFSA “paycheque” plan can work best when one strong dividend stock is treated as a piece of a diversified…

Read more »

A Canada Pension Plan Statement of Contributions with a 100 dollar banknote and dollar coins.
Dividend Stocks

Retirees, Take Note: A January 2026 Portfolio Built to Top Up CPP and OAS

A January TFSA top-up can make CPP and OAS feel less tight by adding a flexible, tax-free income stream you…

Read more »

senior couple looks at investing statements
Dividend Stocks

The TFSA’s Hidden Fine Print When It Comes to U.S. Investments

There's a 15% foreign withholding tax levied on U.S.-based dividends.

Read more »

young people stare at smartphones
Dividend Stocks

Is BCE Stock Finally a Buy in 2026?

BCE has stabilized, but I think a broad infrastructure focused ETF is a better bet.

Read more »

A plant grows from coins.
Dividend Stocks

Start 2026 Strong: 3 Canadian Dividend Stocks Built for Steady Cash Flow

Dividend stocks can make a beginner’s 2026 plan feel real by mixing income today with businesses that can grow over…

Read more »

senior relaxes in hammock with e-book
Dividend Stocks

2 High-Yield Dividend Stocks for Stress-Free Passive Income

These high-yield Canadian companies are well-positioned to maintain consistent dividend payments across varying economic conditions.

Read more »

Senior uses a laptop computer
Dividend Stocks

Below Average? How a 70-Year-Old Can Change Their RRSP Income Plan in January

January is the perfect time to sanity-check your RRSP at 70, because the “typical” balance is closer to the median…

Read more »

Young adult concentrates on laptop screen
Dividend Stocks

If You’re Nervous About 2026, Buy These 3 Canadian Stocks and Relax

A “relaxing” 2026 trio can come from simple, real-economy businesses where demand is easy to understand and execution drives results.

Read more »