Real estate investment trusts are generally considered income investments because they have tax benefits that require them to distribute the majority of their profits to shareholders through dividends. Any investor would be concerned about a potential dividend cut, which could cause the company’s share price to plummet. Here’s a screener of REITs that appear to be well-positioned to maintain or grow their dividends.
In the REIT industry, funds from operations (FFO) are often used to measure a company’s cash available for dividend distributions. This is a non-GAAP measure that adds depreciation and amortization back to earnings while subtracting proceeds from property sales.
Adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) takes this concept a step further by subtracting the cost of maintaining the REIT’s rental properties.
So if we divide the REIT’s annual AFFO by its share price, we get the AFFO yield, which we can compare to the REIT’s dividend yield to see if there’s room for more than the dividend yield. This can give investors comfort that the REIT can at least maintain its dividend and hopefully grow its payouts over time.
There are two broad categories of REITs. Equity REITs develop or own properties for rent or sale. Mortgage REITs invest in mortgage-backed securities or issue mortgage loans. Some REITs operate in both camps.
A pure-play mortgage REIT would not have an estimated AFFO figure because it does not spend money to maintain investment properties. This screen focuses on Equity REITs.
To delve deeper into the industry, we started with the 174 REITs in the Russell 3000 Index RUA, which itself aims to capture 98% of the market share of U.S. exchange-listed stocks.
Of the REITs surveyed by FactSet, 108 are covered by at least five brokerage and research firm analysts and for which consensus 2026 AFFO forecasts are available.
Of these 108 companies, 86 have an AFFO headroom of at least 1.00%, based on current dividend yields and consensus 2026 AFFO estimates.
There are two further tests, according to the advice of Lewis Altfest, CEO of Altfest Personal Wealth Management in New York, who warned MarketWatch in a previous interview that if a stock has a very high dividend yield, “there’s going to be problems.” High yields mean lower share prices, and investors anticipate dividend cuts as they shy away from them.