Energy Transfer stands out as high-yield dividend stock

Few dividend stocks in the energy sector can match what Energy Transfer LP brings to the table right now.

The Dallas-based pipeline giant runs about140,000 miles of pipeline across 44 states.

It moves roughly 30% of all natural gas consumed in the United States. And it just wrapped up the best financial year in its history.

For income investors hunting for yield, that combination is hard to ignore.

Valued at a market cap of almost $68 billion, Energy Transfer (ET) stock has returned “just” 250% to shareholders over the past two decades.

However, if we account for dividend reinvestments, cumulative returns are closer to 1,280%

Despite these outsized returns, the energy dividend stock offers investors a tasty 7% yield in 2026. 

Energy Transfer is a top dividend stock

Here’s the foundation: Energy Transfer earns roughly 90% of its income from fee-based contracts.

It means the company gets paid whether energy prices are high or low. ET is more like a toll road than a commodity trader.

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That stability shows up in the numbers.

  • For the full year 2025, adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) came in at nearly $16 billion, a 3% increase over 2024 and a new partnership record.
  • Q4 alone generated $4.2 billion in adjusted EBITDA, up from $3.9 billion in the same period the year before.
  • Distributable cash flow, or DCF, the metric that matters most for dividend sustainability, was $8.2 billion for the full year.

That’s a strong cushion above the distributions paid out to investors, given an annual dividend expense of roughly $4.6 billion. 

The dividend ratios every investor should know

Here’s a breakdown of the key dividend metrics for Energy Transfer (ET) stock:

  • Annualized distribution: $1.34 per unit 
  • Distribution growth target:3% to 5% annually (long-term)
  • DCF coverage: $8.2 billion for full year 2025 versus $4.6 billion in distributions paid 
  • Leverage target:4x to 4.5x EBITDA, kept in check even during heavy investment
  • Fee-based revenue mix: About 90% of adjusted EBITDA from fee-based contracts
  • Insider ownership: Approximately 10% of total common units outstanding — management has real skin in the game
  • 2026 adjusted EBITDA guidance: $17.45 billion to $17.85 billion

The 3% to 5% growth target isn’t a number pulled out of thin air. Co-CEO Dylan Bramhall said on the company’s February earnings call that it represents “the floor” for what management believes they can sustainably deliver. 

Energy transfer’s massive growth projects fuel the next chapter

Energy Transfer isn’t standing still and plans to spend between $5 billion and $5.5 billion on growth capital in 2026, excluding subsidiaries Sunoco LP and USA Compression Partners.

About two-thirds of that is going into natural gas infrastructure. The Hugh Brinson pipeline, currently 75% complete, is designed to move up to 2.2 billion cubic feet per day from West Texas to eastern markets.

Related: Energy giant sends blunt $20 billion message on dividend growth

 It’s fully contracted from west to east, and early volumes could flow ahead of the official fourth-quarter 2025 target.

Then there’s the Desert Southwest Pipeline, recently upsized from 42 inches to 48 inches to handle up to 2.3 billion cubic feet per day. The full buildout is expected to cost roughly $5.6 billion and come online by late 2029.

The data center and power plant opportunity is also real. Energy Transfer has already signed long-term agreements with Oracle to deliver natural gas to three U.S. data centers. 

It’s in advanced talks across 13 additional states for power plant supply deals. And it recently began flowing gas to a data center campus near Abilene, Texas.

“Within the last year, we have contracted over 6 billion cubic feet per day of pipeline capacity with demand-pull customers,” co-CEO Tom Long said on the company’s Q4 earnings call. 

Energy Transfer has a solid growth pipeline.

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A dividend stock built for long-term income

Out of the 12 analysts covering the blue-chip dividend stock, 10 recommend “buy,” and two recommend “hold.”

Based on consensus price targets, Energy Transfer stock trades at a 12.7% discount. If we adjust for dividends, cumulative returns could be closer to 20%.

What makes Energy Transfer stand out as a dividend stock isn’t just the yield. It’s the combination of yield, coverage, and a clear runway for earnings growth.

The company is entering 2026 with an upgraded EBITDA guidance range of $17.85 billion. New Permian Basin processing plants are coming online mid-year. 

NGL export volumes are ramping at the Nederland terminal. Florida Gas Transmission just opened season on two new pipeline expansions.

Each of those projects feeds directly into future cash flow — and future distributions.

For investors who want a high-yield position backed by real infrastructure and real contracts, Energy Transfer LP is one of the more straightforward cases in the market today.

Related: 109-year-old energy giant paying $4 billion in dividends as oil spikes