Dividend Investors: Top Canadian Energy Stocks for December

These top energy stocks have been shining stars in the sector this year. Going into 2026, they should be top considerations for dividend investors looking to invest in the space.

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Key Points
  • After a strong 2025 rally for Canadian energy (TSX:XEG +16% YTD), December could bring a healthy consolidation or pullback that offers buying opportunities for dividend-focused investors.
  • Top picks: Imperial Oil (TSX:IMO) — integrated dividend compounder with 30 years of increases and a very strong balance sheet; Peyto (TSX:PEY) — low‑cost gas producer paying a monthly dividend ~6% yield; Suncor (TSX:SU) — turnaround story with ~4.1% yield and upside vs. analyst targets.
  • 5 stocks our experts like better than Suncor

The Canadian energy sector has delivered a strong showing in 2025, with the iShares S&P/TSX Capped Energy Index ETF delivering total returns of 16% year to date. 

After such a solid run, a period of consolidation or pullback would be healthy — and potentially rewarding for dividend-focused investors looking to add high-quality names at more attractive prices. 

December could offer just that opportunity. For income investors seeking durability and cash flow strength, three top Canadian energy stocks stand out currently.

Oil industry worker works in oilfield

Source: Getty Images

Imperial Oil: A dividend compounder built for all cycles

Imperial Oil (TSX:IMO) has been one of the sector’s top performers in 2025, delivering a total return north of 43%. This strength is no accident. The company’s integrated business model, operational execution, and disciplined capital allocation continue to reward long-term shareholders.

In the third quarter (Q3) of 2025, Imperial achieved its highest quarterly crude production in over three decades, driven largely by strong performance at its Kearl and Cold Lake assets. Improved reliability and efficiency translated directly into higher volumes and robust free cash flow generation. 

Importantly for dividend investors, Imperial’s operations span the full value chain — upstream production, refining, and chemical manufacturing. This integration helps smooth earnings, as refining margins can offset upstream weakness during periods of lower oil prices.

Imperial’s balance sheet remains among the strongest in the Canadian energy space, with low debt, a solid cash position, and an S&P credit rating of AA-. The company has increased its dividend for 30 consecutive years and continues to supplement shareholder returns through consistent share buybacks, making it a solid core holding for income-focused portfolios.

Peyto Exploration: Monthly income from a low-cost gas leader

Peyto Exploration & Development (TSX:PEY) has emerged as an exceptional dividend play in energy this year, also posting total returns of roughly 43%. The company’s success stems from disciplined execution, a well-structured hedging program, and optimism surrounding long-term natural gas demand tied to LNG export projects.

As one of Canada’s lowest-cost natural gas producers, Peyto can remain profitable even when gas prices are under pressure. This cost advantage supports steady cash flow and a monthly dividend. 

Production growth has been another positive driver, supported by an active drilling program and operational improvements following the Repsol acquisition in late 2023. In Q3 2025, production rose 8% year over year, with modest growth expected to continue into 2026.

At under $22 per share at the time of writing, Peyto offers a dividend yield just above 6% — an attractive feature for investors seeking income and exposure to natural gas.

Suncor Energy: Turnaround success with valuation upside

Suncor Energy (TSX:SU) rounds out the list with year-to-date returns of approximately 22%, driven by a successful operational turnaround under new management. The company posted record upstream production, refinery throughput, and refined product sales in 2025, while upgrader utilization reached multi-year highs.

Suncor’s vertically integrated model — encompassing oil sands production, refining, and its Petro-Canada retail network — provides resilience across commodity cycles. 

Despite its strong execution, analysts currently view Suncor as the most undervalued of the three stocks, with shares trading at roughly a 13% discount to consensus price targets. At about $58 per share, investors can lock in a dividend yield of approximately 4.1%.

Investor takeaway

Together, these three Canadian energy stocks offer dividend investors an interesting mix of income and long-term upside potential heading into 2026 and beyond. But investors should beware that the energy sector is cyclical.

Fool contributor Kay Ng has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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