3 Dividend Stocks to Double Up On Right Now

These three dividend stocks look well-positioned for meaningful total returns over the long term. For those considering portfolio staples, check these stocks out.

| More on:
Key Points
  • Now's the time to consider adding some portfolio exposure to these three top TSX dividend stocks.
  • Here's the story behind each, and why each company can provide much more than consistent (and growing) dividend income over time.

Canadian investors looking to create meaningful passive income streams over the long-term have a rare window right now. Volatility has pushed yields higher on some blue-chip names, even as their long-term cash‑flow stories remain intact.

For patient investors, that combination is usually a sign to quietly double up. Here are three such stocks that look like solid opportunities today to me.

hand stacks coins

Source: Getty Images

BCE Inc.

BCE Inc. (TSX:BCE) has been in the penalty box since its 2025 dividend cut. Indeed, the stock’s performance below speaks to the chagrin investors feel around putting capital to work in this name, at least of late.

That said, I think this dividend reset is exactly what makes the current yield more sustainable than before. BCE’s management team brought its payout ratio down to roughly the mid‑30% range, giving itself breathing room in a higher‑rate world. At around the mid‑$30s per share and a near-5% yield, you’re getting paid nicely to hold a national telecom franchise with entrenched market share.

Telecom demand doesn’t disappear in a slowdown. Indeed, if anything, data usage keeps grinding higher as households prioritize connectivity over discretionary extras. BCE’s cost cuts and capital intensity should ease as major fibre and wireless build‑outs mature. Ultimately, I think this will continue to support free cash flow and future dividend growth from a more conservative base.

Enbridge

Enbridge (TSX:ENB) is another name investors love to complain about, mostly because the share price has treaded water while the business has slowly gotten better. Today, you can lock in a robust dividend yield in the low‑5% range from a diversified energy infrastructure giant that moves a massive share of North America’s oil and gas.

That payout is backed by long‑term, largely contracted cash flows that are far less sensitive to commodity swings than producers. With roughly three consecutive decades of annual dividend hikes supporting Enbridge stock, the company’s 5.3% dividend yield remains one of the most lucrative in the TSX, in my view.

As new projects come to light, I think Enbridge’s world-class (and unmatched) network of laid pipe should provide excellent long-term revenue and earnings growth visibility.

Doubling up here is about embracing slow‑and‑steady total returns. I think mid‑single‑digit dividend growth layered on top of an already fat yield should deliver the right mix of total returns most investors are after.

Fortis

If BCE and Enbridge are the controversial dividend/value plays, Fortis (TSX:FTS) is the quiet compounder you build around.

This regulated utility owns a portfolio of electricity and gas businesses across North America, producing highly predictable cash flows. Management has laid out a roughly $25 billion capital plan through 2028 that should drive its rate base (and therefore, its margins and earnings) around 6% higher each year.

Fortis has increased its dividend for more than 50 consecutive years and is guiding for 4% to 6% annual dividend growth through 2028. That’s a strategy I think is supported by reality, given the quality of Fortis’ conservative balance sheet. That’s the kind of visibility few sectors can offer right now.

For TFSA and RRSP investors, doubling up on Fortis can turn market volatility into an opportunity to secure a growing income stream from a business designed to be boring. That is, in the best possible way.

Fool contributor Chris MacDonald has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Enbridge and Fortis. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

A family watches tv using Roku at home.
Dividend Stocks

1 TSX Stock Up 60% Looks Like an Ideal Forever Hold

Quebecor’s quiet telecom engine is throwing off rising cash flow and paying down debt, even as the stock surges.

Read more »

A plant grows from coins.
Dividend Stocks

2 Canadian Dividend Giants Worth Buying While Rates Stay Put

These two quality dividend stocks offer excellent buying opportunities in this uncertain outlook.

Read more »

coins jump into piggy bank
Dividend Stocks

2 Canadian Dividend Giants Worth Buying While Rates Stay on Hold

Brookfield Corp (TSX:BN) can profit with the Bank of Canada holding rates steady.

Read more »

golden sunset in crude oil refinery with pipeline system
Dividend Stocks

2 Powerful Canadian Stocks I’d Hold Confidently for the Next 5 Years

These two proven Canadian giants could help you build steady wealth over the next five years.

Read more »

shopper buys items in bulk
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks That Look Worth Adding More of Right Now

You may boost your passive income with these 2 TSX dividend growth stocks offering yields up to 5.6% at bargain…

Read more »

runner checks her biodata on smartwatch
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks I’d Feel Comfortable Holding for the Next Two Decades

Two TSX dividend stocks are suitable holdings for investors with a two-decade horizon or more.

Read more »

businessmen shake hands to close a deal
Dividend Stocks

Got $15K? Create $1,108.52 in Annual, Tax-Free Income

Alaris pairs a TFSA-friendly 7%-plus yield with distribution growth by tapping private-company cash flows most investors can’t access.

Read more »

A meter measures energy use.
Dividend Stocks

Fortis vs. the Rest: How Does It Compare to Other Canadian Utility Stocks?

Fortis is a worthy core holding, and a particularly compelling addition on meaningful dips.

Read more »