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Coca-Cola is a Dividend King with 63 years of consecutive annual increases.
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The company’s steadily rising dividend has really added up over the years for long-term shareholders like Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway.
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The global beverage giant is in a strong position to continue increasing its dividend.
I have a nearly unquenchable thirst for passive income. I desire to collect an ever-growing stream of passive income to help me achieve financial independence. That’s leading me to steadily buy more dividend-paying stocks to help satisfy my thirst for income.
One dividend stock I have been buying lately is Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO). This beverage giant is a top holding of Warren Buffett’s company, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A)(NYSE: BRK.B), with a magnificent track record of paying dividends. Here’s why I believe it’s a great dividend stock to buy and hold.
In early 2025, Coca-Cola raised its dividend by 5.2%, marking 63 consecutive years of increases. This achievement keeps the company among the elite Dividend Kings — businesses with 50 or more years of consecutive annual dividend increases. Coca-Cola pays out more than $8 billion in annual dividends and has distributed nearly $100 billion to shareholders via dividends since 2010.
The company’s growing dividend has really added up over the decades. This is evident in the dividend income Berkshire Hathaway collects from Coca-Cola each year. Berkshire Hathaway currently owns 400 million shares, or about 9.3% of Coca-Cola’s outstanding shares. This position is worth $26.7 billion, making it Berkshire’s fourth-largest holding at 8.7% of its investment portfolio. Berkshire currently collects over $800 million in dividend income from Coca-Cola each year. This is notable considering Berkshire only paid about $1.3 billion for the position in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The company earns more dividend income each year as Coca-Cola raises its dividend payment.
Coca-Cola’s dividend currently yields over 3%. That’s more than double the S&P 500‘s dividend yield, which is near a record low at less than 1.2%. At that rate, every $100 I invest in Coca-Cola can generate over $3 of annual dividend income that should steadily rise.
The iconic beverage company should be able to continue increasing its dividend in the coming years. Coca-Cola owns an impressive portfolio of beverage brands that generate durable and growing cash flow. The company generated $10.8 billion of adjusted free cash flow after capital expenditures last year, excluding the impact of an IRS tax litigation deposition. That gave it a 73% dividend payout ratio, which is comfortable for a company with Coca-Cola’s strong financial profile. While the company expects its adjusted free cash flow to be lower this year at $9.5 billion (excluding a contingent payment related to its 2020 Fairlife acquisition), that’s still more than enough cash to cover its current dividend level.