This 4.6% Dividend Stock Is My Top Pick for Immediate Income

Lundin Gold just posted record free cash flow, a 4.6% dividend yield, and +50% margins. Here’s why it’s our top pick for income investors in 2026.

| More on:
Key Points
  • Lundin Gold generated $926 million in free cash flow in 2025 and paid out $664 million in dividends, one of the most aggressive capital return programs in the gold sector.
  • The company's Fruta del Norte mine in Ecuador is among the highest-grade, lowest-cost gold operations in the world, with all-in sustaining costs of just $1,015 per ounce against an average realized gold price of $3,594 per ounce in 2025.
  • A new ore body called FDNS is now in reserves and heading into development, which means production upside is building just as income investors are collecting generous payouts.

Let’s get right to it: Lundin Gold (TSX:LUG) could be the best dividend stock in the gold sector right now, and most Canadian income investors still haven’t noticed.

It generated over US$900 million in free cash flow last year, paid out more than US$664 million in dividends, and just declared another quarterly dividend of US$1.15 per share. At current prices, that works out to a yield of roughly 4.6%.

Valued at a market cap of $23.7 billion, Lundin is a high-margin gold producer with one of the best mines on the planet sitting at full stride.

Man holds Canadian dollars in differing amounts

Source: Getty Images

A blue-chip gold mine

Fruta del Norte is located in southeast Ecuador and is 100% owned by Lundin Gold. The average gold grade is 9.5 grams per ton, which is several times higher than most major gold mines globally. The higher the grade, the more gold you get per ton of rock processed, and the lower your costs.

In 2025, cash operating costs came in at US$838 per ounce. The average realized gold price for the year was US$3,594 per ounce. That’s a basic margin of 72%. Very few businesses in any industry operate at those margins, let alone a mining company.

The mill processed over 1.8 million tons last year at an average of 5,009 tons per day, a record. The company is now targeting 5,500 tons per day in 2026, with a broader expansion study underway to push beyond that.

The TSX dividend stock ended 2025 with US$630 million in cash and no meaningful debt. That kind of balance sheet gives management flexibility to keep growing without asking shareholders for money.

The dividend structure is built to deliver

Lundin has a fixed component of US$0.30 per share per quarter, which is the baseline. Then there’s a variable component tied directly to free cash flow. In the fourth quarter of 2025, that variable portion was US$0.85 per share, reflecting 100% of normalized free cash flow (FCF) for the quarter, well above the company’s stated policy minimum of 50%.

The Q4 total payout of US$1.15 per share amounted to roughly US$278 million. For the full year, Lundin paid out US$664 million in dividends while still ending with US$630 million in the bank.

FCF is forecast to improve to US$1.7 billion in 2026 and US$1.71 billion in 2027, which should support further dividend hikes.

A new ore asset

Income investors sometimes worry that a big dividend comes at the cost of future growth. However, Lundin Gold just added a new deposit, called FDNS, or Fruta del Norte South, into its mineral reserves for the first time.

Underground development toward that deposit is now underway, with roughly $30 million to $35 million in capital budgeted for 2026. CEO Jamie Beck described FDNS as a complementary addition to existing mining operations: not a massive overhaul, but a steady extension of mine life and production at current levels.

The company also has five copper-gold porphyry targets identified on its broader land package, some of which are posting extraordinary drilling results. At Sandia, the best intercept to date came in at 322 metres, with 1.08% copper equivalent near the surface.

Total proven and probable reserves now stand at 5.85 million ounces, up 6% year-over-year, even after accounting for 2025 mining depletion. Mine life is currently estimated at roughly 12 years, and that number is likely conservative given ongoing exploration success.

For Canadian investors looking for immediate income backed by a genuinely world-class asset, Lundin Gold deserves to be near the top of the list.

Fool contributor Aditya Raghunath 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.

More on Dividend Stocks

a person watches a downward arrow crash through the floor
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian Dividend Stocks Yielding Up to 6.5% Worth Owning When Growth Falls Out of Favour

These Canadian dividend stocks provide reliable income through regular dividend payments, regardless of market volatility.

Read more »

dividend stocks are a good way to earn passive income
Dividend Stocks

How to Build a Paycheque Portfolio With 2 Stocks That Pay Monthly

These monthly dividend stocks are backed by resilient business models, and are well-positioned to keep rewarding shareholders.

Read more »

up arrow on wooden blocks
Dividend Stocks

This Canadian Dividend Stock Is Up 94% — and Still 1 of the Best on the TSX

This is a reasonably priced Canadian dividend stock for long-term wealth creation.

Read more »

Piggy bank on a flying rocket
Dividend Stocks

The Canadian Companies That’ve Been Quietly Raising Their Dividend Payouts

Canadian Pacific Kansas City Railway (TSX:CP) increased its dividend 17.5%!

Read more »

top TSX stocks to buy
Dividend Stocks

2 TSX Dividend Stocks I’d Hold for the Next Decade

Two TSX dividend stocks stand out as buy-and-hold candidates for income-focused investors.

Read more »

Income and growth financial chart
Dividend Stocks

3 Top-Tier Canadian Stocks That Just Bumped Up Dividends Again

Add these three TSX dividend stocks to your portfolio if you seek stocks that increase payouts regularly.

Read more »

Piggy bank with word TFSA for tax-free savings accounts.
Dividend Stocks

Use a TFSA to Earn $500 a Month With No Tax

Earning $500 a month tax-free through the TFSA is a realistic goal for many Canadians.

Read more »

dividends can compound over time
Dividend Stocks

1 Magnificent TSX Dividend Stock Down 25% to Buy and Hold for Decades

This TSX dividend giant could reward patient investors with decades of growth and income.

Read more »