An Ideal TFSA Stock for June Paying 7% Each Month

A dealership-focused REIT paying monthly income could quietly turn a $7,000 TFSA contribution into steady tax-free cash flow.

| More on:
Key Points
  • Automotive Properties REIT pays monthly distributions near a 7% yield, so $7,000 could generate about $470 yearly.
  • Its dealership real estate niche offers steady rent, and the payout looks covered with a roughly 79% AFFO payout ratio.
  • Rising rates, debt costs, or a weaker auto retail market could pressure growth and the unit price.

Monthly cash still turns heads. That’s especially true inside a Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA), where every distribution can land tax-free and keep working. Investors don’t need the flashiest stock on the TSX to build real wealth. Sometimes, the better choice is a steady income payer tied to a simple, durable corner of the economy.

looking backward in car mirror

Source: Getty Images

APR

That’s why Automotive Properties Real Estate Investment Trust (TSX:APR.UN) looks like an ideal TFSA stock for May. It owns automotive dealership properties, pays monthly cash, and offers a yield around the mid-single digits. At around a 7% yield, a $7,000 TFSA contribution could produce about $470 a year in tax-free income. That doesn’t sound life-changing overnight, but reinvested over time, it can start doing real work.

COMPANYRECENT PRICENUMBER OF SHARESANNUAL DIVIDENDANNUAL TOTAL PAYOUTFREQUENCYTOTAL INVESTMENT
APR.UN$12.18574$0.82$470.68Monthly$6,991.32

Automotive Properties REIT isn’t complicated. It owns income-producing real estate leased to automotive dealership and service businesses across Canada and the United States. That makes the business interesting right now. The auto market keeps rapidly changing. Electric vehicles, higher financing costs, shifting consumer demand, and supply-chain changes all create noise. Yet dealerships still need physical locations.

The monthly dividend adds the hook. The real estate investment trust (REIT) currently pays $0.0685 per unit each month, equal to $0.822 annually. For TFSA investors, that regular cash flow can either support income needs or buy more units through reinvestment. The second option looks especially powerful for younger investors or anyone still building contribution room.

Into earnings

The latest results also support the income case. In the first quarter of 2026, Automotive Properties reported stronger rental revenue, helped by acquisitions and contractual rent increases. The REIT also generated an adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) payout ratio of 78.6%, suggesting the distribution had breathing room, rather than sitting right on the edge.

Furthermore, Automotive Properties continues to buy dealership properties, including recent acquisitions in Canada and the United States. That gives it a path to grow rental income over time. It also has a fairly unique niche. Investors can find plenty of apartment, retail, industrial, and office REITs. A dealership-focused REIT gives a TFSA something different.

The real appeal comes from predictability. Automotive Properties signs leases with dealership operators, often tied to major auto groups and brands. Those tenants tend to invest heavily in their locations because dealership sites need customer visibility, service bays, parts areas, and brand standards. Moving isn’t always easy. That can make the landlord-tenant relationship stickier than investors might first assume.

Considerations

Still, no TFSA stock is perfect. Automotive Properties carries interest-rate risk, like most REITs. Higher borrowing costs can pressure valuations and make acquisitions less attractive. The dividend stock also depends on the health of the auto retail market. If dealerships struggle, consolidate too aggressively, or close locations, that could hurt demand. Investors should also watch debt levels and payout ratios over time.

There’s another point to remember. A monthly dividend doesn’t automatically make a stock safe. Investors still need growing cash flow, disciplined acquisitions, and reasonable financing. Automotive Properties checks many of those boxes today, but it deserves regular review like any income stock.

For TFSA investors, though, the setup looks appealing. The REIT offers monthly cash, a simple business model, and exposure to a real estate niche that many portfolios don’t already hold. It also offers income without forcing investors into a very high yield that may signal deeper trouble.

Bottom line

June can be a smart time to reset a TFSA strategy before summer spending takes over. Instead of leaving cash idle, investors can put it into a stock designed to pay them back month after month.

Automotive Properties REIT won’t be the loudest stock on the TSX, but that’s part of the charm. For investors seeking tax-free income, steady real estate exposure, and a practical dividend payer, it looks like one TFSA stock worth parking in for the long haul.

Fool contributor Amy Legate-Wolfe has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Automotive Properties Real Estate Investment Trust. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

man crosses arms and hands to make stop sign
Dividend Stocks

Are You Using Your TFSA the Right Way? Many Canadians Aren’t

You pay no taxes on Fortis (TSX:FTS) stock in a TFSA.

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 high-yield dividend stocks have relibale monthly payouts and are likely to sustain thier distributions in the years ahead.

Read more »

Piggy bank and Canadian coins
Dividend Stocks

Here’s the Average Canadian TFSA and RRSP at Age 35

Owning the right long-term investments can be excellent for your retirement goals, and here’s what you need to do to…

Read more »

woman checks off all the boxes
Dividend Stocks

1 Magnificent Canadian Dividend Stock Down 39% to Buy and Hold for Decades

Constellation Software pays a tiny dividend, but its 39% drawdown hands long-term investors a rare shot at market-beating gains.

Read more »

ETFs can contain investments such as stocks
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian ETFs Soaring Upwards to Buy Now for a TFSA

The top-performing Canadian ETFs can provide reliable, tax-free passive income to TSFA investors like the established dividend payers.

Read more »

ETF is short for exchange traded fund, a popular investment choice for Canadians
Dividend Stocks

A Canadian ETF I’d Seriously Consider Adding to My Portfolio in 2026

This low-risk monthly income ETF beats most bank savings accounts.

Read more »

man looks surprised at investment growth
Dividend Stocks

TFSA VS. RRSP: The Simple Rule Canadians Forget

Canadians using the RRSP and TFSA can develop a tax-efficient financial engine by leveraging the tax-treatments of both accounts.

Read more »

Piggy bank and Canadian coins
Dividend Stocks

How the Average TFSA Changes Across Canada

TFSA averages vary by province, but the real edge comes from giving your TFSA a job — and Cascades could…

Read more »