A 9.5% dividend yield! 2 dividend stocks to consider for long-term passive income

DIVIDEND YIELD text written on a notebook with chart

These dividend stocks offer enormous yields and long records of payout growth. Here’s why they demand serious attention right now.

A top REIT

Real estate investment trusts (REITs) can be great shares to target long-term passive income. Sector rules state at least 90% of annual rental earnings must be paid out in dividends. This can make the cash rewards they deliver less volatile than those from other dividend shares.

Unite (LSE:UTG) is one trust I feel demands close attention. It operates in the highly defensive student accommodation market, which gives profits protection from changing economic conditions. Following its acquisition of sector rival Empiric Student Property, it will be the UK’s largest operator with 75,000 beds, chiefly centred on the country’s strongest universities.

Unite has proven one of the UK’s most reliable dividend growth stocks, with payouts rising almost every year since 2011. The only exception came in 2019 when Covid-19 uncertainty forced a reduction.

For this year, the REIT’s dividend yield is a large 6.2%, which is almost double the FTSE 100 average of 3.2%. This figure has been boosted by a sharp fall in Unite’s shares on Wednesday (8 October) — then, the company said sales to date had delivered rental growth of 4%, down from 8.2% in the same 2024 period.

I think this represents an attractive dip-buying opportunity to consider.

Competition is tough, and Unite’s problems are being compounded by extra stress on students’ budgets right now. But the long-term sector outlook remains robust, and the company’s increased scale gives it a significant advantage. I expect dividends to continue rising over the next decade and beyond.

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Going green

Foresight Solar Fund (LSE:FSFL) is another top dividend stock worth serious attention after recent price weakness.

It’s fallen in value as optimism over sustained interest rate cuts over the next year have declined. As with Unite, asset values come under pressure when rates are higher, and cost of borrowing pressures increase.

While this issue can be significant, the impact it’s had on Foresight’s dividend yield merits serious consideration. Its forward yield is now an enormous 10.7%.

Like any renewable energy stock, the company has significant long-term investment potential as the move from fossil fuels continues apace.

Foresight has ambitious plans to capitalise on the green transition — the business has 1 GW of capacity across its assets, and plans to treble its development pipeline to 3 GW from current levels, with growth focused on the UK and Europe where clean energy policy is especially favourable.

Investing in energy producers has another significant advantage for investors. Electricity demand is largely unchanged across the economic cycle, giving companies the financial strength and the confidence to steadily raise dividends.

In the case of Foresight, annual dividends have risen each year since it listed on the London stock market in 2013. It’s a theme I expect to continue long into the future.

The post A 9.5% dividend yield! 2 dividend stocks to consider for long-term passive income appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.

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Royston Wild has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Foresight Solar Fund. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.