Top 5 Canadian Dividend Stocks to Buy in 2025

Dividend investing in Canada is powerful because you can combine reliable cash flow with long-term growth—and do it inside TFSA/RRSP for tax advantages. Below are five TSX names with durable moats, disciplined capital allocation, and track records of paying (and often growing) dividends. This is educational, not personal advice; always check the latest filings and your own risk tolerance.


How I Picked Dividend Stocks (Quick Criteria)

  • Resilient cash generation (regulated or contracted, diversified revenue)
  • Reasonable payout discipline (room to reinvest and grow)
  • Balance sheet quality (investment-grade where applicable)
  • History of dividend stability/growth
  • Clear 2025 catalysts (rate path, new projects, cost controls, or recovery)

At-a-Glance Table

TickerCompanySectorDividend StyleWhy Now (2025)Key Risks
FTSFortisRegulated UtilitiesDividend-growthLong runway of regulated CAPEX; multiyear dividend-growth guidance historically intactRate decisions, project delays
ENBEnbridgeEnergy InfrastructureHigh yield + moderate growthLong-term, contracted pipes & gas utilities; inflation-linked features on some assetsLeverage, energy policy, project execution
TTELUSTelecomDividend-growth (moderate)5G/fibre penetration, cost takeout, optionality in TELUS International & HealthCompetition, capital intensity, wireless pricing
POWPower CorporationFinancial Holding Co.Balanced yield + NAV growthExposure to Great-West/IGM + alternative assets; disciplined buybacksMarket drawdowns, holding-company discount
EIFExchange IncomeDiversified IndustrialsMonthly dividend, growth via acquisitionsNiche aviation & essential services with long contracts; steady deal pipelineIntegration risk, cyclicality in certain niches

Honourable mentions: MFC (Manulife), GWO (Great-West Lifeco), BNS (Bank of Nova Scotia) for higher yield, CU (Canadian Utilities) for ultra-stable hikes, SRU.UN (SmartCentres REIT) for retail-anchored income.


1) Fortis (FTS) — Regulated & Reliable

Why it’s on the list: Fortis operates regulated electric and gas utilities across North America. Regulated assets mean predictable cash flows and visibility on rate-base growth. Management has maintained dividend-growth guidance for decades, making FTS a cornerstone for Canadian dividend-growth portfolios.

What to watch in 2025

  • Execution on multi-year CAPEX to expand the regulated rate base
  • Interest-rate path (lower or stable rates support utility valuations)

Best account: TFSA/RRSP (compounding those annual increases tax-advantaged)


2) Enbridge (ENB) — Income Engine with Scale

Why it’s on the list: ENB owns critical North American energy infrastructure (liquids & gas pipelines, gas utilities, renewables). Much of its cash flow is long-term and contracted, supporting a higher starting yield with measured growth.

2025 lens

  • Integration of recent gas-utility acquisitions
  • Asset rotations to manage leverage and fund growth

Key risk: Regulatory pushback and project timing; monitor debt metrics and capital plan.


3) TELUS (T) — Cash Flow from Connectivity

Why it’s on the list: TELUS pairs core wireless/fibre with adjacencies in health, agriculture, and customer-experience (TI). As fibre builds mature and 5G monetization improves, free cash flow should strengthen, supporting ongoing dividend growth.

2025 lens

  • Cost-reduction programs and capex normalization
  • Performance at TELUS International/Health as incremental catalysts

Key risk: Industry pricing pressure and heavy historical capex.


4) Power Corporation (POW) — A Diversified Dividend Hub

Why it’s on the list: Through stakes in Great-West Lifeco and IGM, plus alternative-asset platforms, POW offers broad financial exposure and typically a solid payout, with opportunistic buybacks reducing the holding-company discount over time.

2025 lens

  • Capital returns from subs (dividends/buybacks) flowing to POW
  • Any simplification steps that narrow the NAV discount

Key risk: Market drawdowns in wealth/insurance; keep an eye on the look-through leverage.


5) Exchange Income (EIF) — Monthly Payer with Niche Moat

Why it’s on the list: EIF owns essential-service businesses (regional aviation, aerospace/defence, utilities-adjacent services). Contracts and government/industrial customers support steady cash, and management has a long record of disciplined acquisitions—while paying a monthly dividend.

2025 lens

  • Post-deal integration and organic growth in aerospace services
  • Debt management as rates evolve

Key risk: Acquisition integration and exposure to cyclical end-markets.


Building a Simple 2025 Dividend Core (Example)

  • Core stability (40–50%): FTS (+ optionally CU for even steadier growth)
  • Income anchor (25–35%): ENB (+ BNS if you want bank yield)
  • Growth-tilted cash flow (15–25%): T, EIF
  • Diversifier (10–20%): POW (financials)

Rebalance annually; reinvest dividends (“DRIP”) in TFSA/RRSP when possible.


What Could Go Wrong (Risk Brief)

  • Rates stay higher for longer: pressures highly levered, capital-intensive sectors (utilities/telecom/pipelines).
  • Regulatory/project setbacks: delay cash flows.
  • Earnings cyclicality: particularly at EIF’s industrial ends and financials’ market sensitivity.
  • Concentration risk: spreading across sectors (utilities/telecom/energy/financial/industrial) helps.

Implementation Tips (for Canadian investors)

  • Account placement: Canadian dividends are tax-efficient in taxable accounts, but TFSA (tax-free) and RRSP (tax-deferred) simplify and compound faster.
  • Position sizing: start equal-weight, then tilt toward your income vs. growth preference.
  • When to buy: stagger entries (monthly/quarterly) to average into volatility; watch earnings and rate decisions.
  • What to track: payout ratio trend, debt/EBITDA, capex plans, credit ratings, and multi-year dividend guidance.

FAQ

Are these “forever holds”?
Utilities and pipelines often are—if fundamentals hold. Telecoms/financials/industrials require more active monitoring.

What yield should I expect?
Yields fluctuate with price. Focus on safety + growth runway, not just the headline yield.

ETFs instead?
For one-ticket income, consider broad Canadian dividend ETFs—but single stocks can tailor yield/growth to your goals.

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