Pairing high-yield with high-quality is harder than most dividend lists admit. We applied invest-like's 7-framework consensus screen and the A-D dividend safety scorer to the entire universe. Ten stocks pass both filters as of May 2026.
Why stock prices fall without bad news: the 6 mechanical reasons that have nothing to do with the underlying business
A stock can drop 20 percent in a week with no fundamental change. Six structural reasons (sector rotation, index rebalancing, options flow, sentiment cascade, tax-loss harvesting, redemption pressure) that explain price moves the news doesn't.
Why the Magic Formula stopped working in 2024 (and what to do about it)
Joel Greenblatt's Magic Formula returned ~30% annualised in the 1988-2004 back-test. Over the rolling 5 years ending 2024 it underperformed the S&P 500 by ~6 percentage points. Here is why, and how the quality+value combination needs to evolve to keep beating the index in 2026.
Where Buffett would shop now: Q2 2026 edition — 10 stocks that pass every one of his published criteria
Quarterly contrarian column applying Warren Buffett's documented framework to the current US market. The 10 stocks that pass all five Buffett pillars and meet Berkshire's typical sizing constraints right now, with the financial case for each in 2-3 sentences.
Most "best dividend stocks" articles are constructed by sorting the S&P 500 by yield and writing about the top 20 names. The result is a list of dividend traps — high yield exactly because the underlying business is suspect and the dividend is at risk of being cut.
This post is built differently. We took the entire 12,000-stock universe and applied two filters simultaneously:
Combining the two filters, ten stocks currently pass both as of May 2026. The list is automatically regenerated as fundamentals refresh — bookmark this URL to see the current cohort.
Yes, the yield is low — but Visa's dividend has grown ~20% annually for the last decade, and the payout ratio sits below 20% leaving enormous room for continued growth. The A-grade dividend safety reflects the extreme FCF cushion.
For pure-yield hunters Visa won't be exciting. For total-return investors thinking 10-year compounding, Visa's combination of safety and growth puts it near the top of the dividend universe.
Live: /buffett/v/.
Same thesis as Visa. The other half of the payment-network duopoly. Slightly lower yield, slightly higher growth rate, same A-grade safety.
Buffett's framework calls Microsoft borderline-rich; the dividend-growth track record is impeccable, and the FCF coverage is extreme. The dividend safety holds even if AI capex margins compress because the underlying SaaS business funds the dividend many times over.
The classic dividend aristocrat. 60+ years of consecutive dividend increases. JNJ fails Lynch (mature growth) and Fisher (gross margin too low for Fisher's threshold), but passes Buffett, Graham, Greenblatt, Munger, and Smith.
Higher yield than the payment networks, more mature growth profile, equally clean A-grade safety.
Live: /buffett/jnj/.
Buffett's largest single position by holding period (since the 1960s). The dividend has grown ~10% annually for the last decade. Treated as a network business not a bank by Smith's framework.
Live: /buffett/axp/.
The Buffett textbook holding. 60+ year dividend-aristocrat track record. Higher yield than the payment networks, slower growth. Fails Lynch on EPS growth rate; passes everything else.
Live: /buffett/ko/.
Another 60+ year dividend-aristocrat. Passes Buffett, Graham, Munger, Smith, partial Fisher; fails Lynch and Greenblatt on growth/valuation respectively. A-grade dividend safety even through inflation cycles.
Live: /buffett/pg/.
Credit-rating duopoly. Lower yield, higher growth. Buffett owns it through Berkshire. A-grade safety on extreme FCF cushion.
Live: /buffett/mco/.
The other credit-rating duopolist. Same A-grade safety, similar growth profile. Fails Graham on P/E (typical of high-quality compounders), passes the other six frameworks.
Live: /buffett/spgi/.
Buffett-Munger-aligned membership-driven moat. The yield is famously small, but Costco has a history of large special dividends (most recently $15/share in 2024). Adjusted for special dividends, the effective yield is closer to 1.5%. A-grade safety on the lowest payout ratio in the consumer-staples universe.
Live: /buffett/cost/.
These are the names you would expect to see on a dividend list but didn't make our combined filter:
The point of the strict filter: a high yield by itself is not enough. The business must also be passing the value-investing canon's quality tests, AND have demonstrated dividend-coverage safety.
Every stock named in this article has a live page with the current dividend yield, payout ratio, FCF coverage, debt/EBITDA, dividend safety letter grade, and the 7-framework consensus breakdown. Open any of them and the underlying numbers are visible:
If the underlying number doesn't match what's in this article, it's because fundamentals refreshed since the article was written. The live page is always current.
Dividend-investing is value-investing's most-defensive flavour. The best dividend stocks are not the highest yielding — they are the ones where the dividend safety is unimpeachable AND the underlying business passes quality tests AND the price is reasonable.
The 7-framework + dividend-safety double filter narrows the universe to ten names. That's the sweet spot: enough diversification to be a real portfolio, tight enough to ensure quality on every name.
For a deeper read on what the dividend safety A-D grades actually mean, see our methodology post on dividend safety.
Educational tool. The stocks named in this article are mechanically-screened outputs of our published methodology applied to current fundamentals. They are not personalised investment recommendations. Past dividend history does not guarantee future payments; past framework consensus does not guarantee future returns. Tax treatment of dividends varies by country — German residents, for example, pay Abgeltungsteuer + Soli + Kirchensteuer on dividend income, which materially affects after-tax yield.
Author: Zaid Ghazal, founder of invest-like, Kiel, Germany.