3 Dividend Stocks That Could Help You Sleep Better in 2026

These three “sleep-better” dividend stocks rely on essential demand, giving you steadier cash flow when markets get noisy.

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Key Points
  • Hydro One is the most predictable because it’s regulated, but it trades rich and yields less.
  • Choice Properties adds a higher yield backed by grocery-anchored occupancy, though leverage and rates still matter.
  • Metro has the lowest yield, but strong dividend growth and staple demand can compound returns over time.

The market has thrown a lot at Canadian investors already this year — oil prices past US$110, inflation expected to bounce back toward 3%, the Bank of Canada holding rates while warning of a weaker growth outlook, and trade policy uncertainty that has not gone away.

In that kind of environment, the dividend stocks that genuinely help you sleep are the ones that do not need any of those issues to resolve favourably. They collect cash from things people keep buying, carry manageable debt, and protect the payout because the business demands it, not because management is feeling generous.

For investors who want their portfolio to stay calm while the headlines incite anxiety, these three stocks are worth a close look.

sleeping man relaxes with clay mask and cucumbers on eyes

Source: Getty Images

H

Hydro One (TSX:H) fits the “sleep better” test perfectly. It runs a regulated electricity transmission and distribution business in Ontario. People don’t cancel electricity in a slow patch, and regulators typically allow utilities to earn a return on approved investments over long periods. Over the last year, the story has stayed steady: ongoing grid investment, predictable demand, and the usual rate-case rhythm that investors either love or hate.

For the year ended December 31, 2025, Hydro One reported net income attributable to common shareholders of $1.34 billion and earnings per share of $2.23, up from $1.156 billion and $1.93 in 2024. It also reported fourth-quarter earnings per share (EPS) of $0.39 versus $0.33 a year earlier. On valuation, the dividend stock trading at about 26 times earnings with a 2.3% yield. Meanwhile, the outlook hinges on continued rate base growth and smooth regulatory outcomes, while the key risks sit in interest-rate sensitivity and any regulatory decisions that pinch returns.

Hydro One is the anchor stocks of these three — regulated returns, rising earnings, and a business model so essential that Ontario literally cannot function without it. The 2.3% yield is the price of that certainty, and right now, certainty has real value.

CHP.UN

Choice Properties REIT (TSX:CHP.UN) owns a huge portfolio of retail, industrial, and mixed-use assets, and the grocery anchor tends to keep traffic sticky and occupancy high. Over the last year, its narrative has focused on strong tenant demand, steady leasing spreads, and development deliveries that add high-quality space at attractive yields.

In Q4 2025, it reported funds from operations (FFO) per diluted unit of $0.262, and for full-year 2025 it reported FFO per diluted unit of $1.069, up 3.6% year over year. It finished the year with occupancy of 98.2%, and it maintained adjusted debt metrics around 7 times adjusted debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) with interest coverage of 3.2 times. It also announced a fourth consecutive annual distribution increase, lifting the annual rate to $0.78 per unit from $0.77 yielding 4.8% at writing.

Choice Properties’ grocery traffic doesn’t slow down in a weak economy, and four consecutive distribution increases are a good sign that management has confidence in what it’s doing.

MRU

Metro (TSX:MRU) rounds out the sleep-better trio as groceries and pharmacies keep moving even when consumers get cautious. Metro runs grocery banners and a large pharmacy business through Jean Coutu and Brunet, and it has proven it can protect margins while still investing in the network. Over the last year, it kept pushing discount expansion, leaned into online growth, and dealt with a very real operational hiccup from a temporary shutdown at a frozen food distribution centre in Toronto. That kind of issue can sting a quarter, but it usually does not break a well-run staples business.

In its first quarter of fiscal 2026, Metro reported sales of $5.286 billion, up 3.3% year over year. Fully diluted EPS came in at $1.05, while adjusted fully diluted EPS rose to $1.16, up 5.5%, after backing out direct costs related to the distribution centre shutdown. It also raised the quarterly dividend to $0.4075 per share, up 10.1% from the prior year. On valuation, it recently traded around 21.5 times trailing earnings, with a market cap around $21 billion and a dividend yield around 1.7%. The outlook depends on steady food inflation dynamics, continued execution in discount and online, and tight cost control, while the key risks sit in margin pressure and any further supply-chain disruptions.

Metro’s business selling groceries and filling prescriptions is about as recession-resistant as the TSX offers. The 1.7% yield looks modest, but the growth rate behind it does not.

Bottom line

These three stocks bring different kinds of comfort for the same goal: staying calm while the market doesn’t. Hydro One offers regulated certainty. Choice Properties offers grocery-anchored monthly income. Metro offers dividend growth from a business that keeps earning through any economic weather. And right now, even $7,000 in each can put your money to work.

COMPANYRECENT PRICENUMBER OF SHARES YOU COULD BUY WITH $7,000ANNUAL DIVIDENDTOTAL ANNUAL PAYOUTPAYOUT
FREQUENCY
H$58.49119$1.33$158.27Quarterly
MRU$98.0171$1.63$115.73Quarterly
CHP.UN$16.01437$0.77$336.49Monthly

Each of these businesses is built on a foundation that tends to stay standing when the market gets wobbly — which in 2026 is exactly the kind of portfolio insurance many investors are looking for.

Fool contributor Amy Legate-Wolfe 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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