3J·

ETF with a focus on dividends

Good evening community,

I save 200€ per month in $IWDA, 20€ in $EXUS and another 10€ in $XMME.

An additional 30€ in $VHYL to ensure a long-term passive income.


I looked at the dividend data of $VHYL and saw that the dividend growth is low.


Can anyone recommend better dividend ETFs or would it generally make more sense to generate passive income via dividend stocks like $O (+1,37 %) or similar.


Best regards

2
21 Commentaires

image de profil
10
@golden_twenties Thanks for your reply. Somehow the domicile abgeschreckt🤷‍♂️ has been almost exclusively Ireland for ETFs until now
image de profil
@ya301kr Withholding tax is of course an issue, but the dividend is significantly better than at $VHYL and the share price performance is quite respectable. For me, the perfect complement to the $VWRL
1
@golden_twenties Yes, you're right. Thanks for your Meinung☺️
Would you wait for a good entry or redeploy the money from $VHYL directly?
image de profil
@ya301kr Personally, I see no reason to wait if you decide to reallocate.
1
@golden_twenties ah just saw that you've already suggested it 😁...
I think it's great.
@golden_twenties true, but ☝🏽...if the tax-free amount has already been exhausted, it no longer matters.
@golden_twenties I agree, it's so stable...you had to wait a long time for an entry ☝🏽😅
image de profil
2
Have a look at the vanEck morningstar
$TDIV...I have that too.
Yes, it's the Netherlands, withholding tax .... but if your tax-free allowance has already been used, it doesn't matter.
If you are still young, it has good divi growth and a good price increase.
Most of the ones I looked at have either a strong focus on dividends or divi growth, but very low dividends.
1
image de profil
@Coyote980 could you explain to me what you mean by "if the allowance has been used, it no longer matters"

In what way does it make a difference whether the tax-free amount has been used up or not?
@BockaufDividenden an ETF from Ireland is tax-free, only the German one deducts the taxes...unless you still have the allowance of 1000€ open, then everything is tax-free.

In the Netherlands, taxes are due, which means you have a €1000 allowance, but in the Netherlands you still pay taxes on dividends...that would be a waste of money. But since most people have already exhausted the amount either way, it doesn't matter.

Nothing earth-shattering, but good to know...
There's a video somewhere that explains it better 😅
I am a foreigner 😂
1
image de profil
@Coyote980 oh yes, you mean the other withholding tax or double taxation agreements, but thank you :)
1
@BockaufDividenden Yes, I'm not that much of an explainer ... 😅
But I was wondering about that when I started with the SP.
And then I came across this information. That's why I don't see the taxes as such a tragedy....
Most people have already exhausted the 1000€/2000€.
1
@BockaufDividenden After exceeding the tax-free amount, you even pay slightly less tax here, as the solidarity surcharge is not calculated on the 15% withholding tax in the Netherlands 😎
2
image de profil
@Hulkhagen ahh nice! I didn't know that!
@Hulkhagen OK, I didn't know that little thing either. Yes, some things don't look good at first glance. But as I said, I think this ETF is great.
2
@Coyote980 Me too. I am invested
1
image de profil
1
image de profil
image de profil
Take a look at $HAUTO $AGNC $MAIN
Participez à la conversation