-Since many people have little time or desire to analyze hundreds of stocks and read the news and quarterly reports, dividend ETFs make it easy and stress-free to implement a dividend strategy.
-If a position in the index reduces or cancels its dividends, it is automatically removed from the index and replaced.
-With a junior custody account for children, the saver's allowance (€1,000) and the basic allowance (€11,604) can be utilized each year with dividends even without selling. This means up to €12,604 per child in 2024. In 2025 it is expected to be more than €13,000. The link in the bio / profile description will take you to the Juniordepot (advertising).
-I myself had the iShares UK Dividend and the iShares Euro Stoxx Select Dividend 30 ETF many years ago. Thanks to steady dividend growth, after a while I was already receiving 10% dividends p.a. from both ETFs. Unfortunately, I later sold the ETFs to sink the money into Wirecard. Biggest mistake. Incidentally, the MSCI World ETF only pays a dividend of 1.16%.
-The information provided by the broker/bank on ETFs is often incorrect and no longer up to date. It is therefore better to check directly with the issuer.
-Of course, the dividend yield is not the only quality feature. There is also the dividend increase, the performance of the ETF and it must fit your own portfolio and strategy.
- Which dividend ETFs do you have?

