Quick Read
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1,000 shares of MMM generate $3,120 in annual passive income from quarterly dividends at a roughly 2% yield.
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3M’s decades-long Dividend Aristocrat streak broke in 2024, but two consecutive annual raises signal a recovering payout trajectory.
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3M’s payout ratio sits under 40% of guided 2026 earnings, with free cash flow far exceeding the annual dividend obligation.
Passive income has a way of quieting the noise. Whether markets are grinding higher, correcting hard, or drifting sideways, a dividend check lands in your account on the schedule the company sets, regardless of what the stock is doing. For investors building a paycheck that arrives without a shift, without a client, and without a manager, dividend equities offer something real estate and private credit cannot: instant liquidity alongside cash flow.
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That flexibility matters more when the underlying business is a 120-year-old industrial with global scale, entrenched brands, and a fresh operational reset. 3M (NYSE:MMM) produces more than 60,000 products under brands including Scotch, Post-it, and Command, and its dividend has been a fixture of income portfolios for generations. The question for buyers today is what a meaningful position actually pays, and whether the payout can hold.
We screened our 24/7 Wall St. dividend equity research database and ran the math on one specific position size that income investors ask about constantly: 1,000 shares of 3M.
The 1,000-Share Math on 3M
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Current Share Price: $160.53
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Current Quarterly Dividend: $0.78
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Forward Annual Dividend: $3.12 per share
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Forward Yield: roughly 1.94%
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Cost of 1,000 shares: $160,530
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Annual Passive Income: $3,120
That $3,120 arrives in four roughly equal quarterly installments, with payment dates consistently falling on the 12th of March, June, September, and December. It is a modest headline yield by high-income standards, and the coverage and trajectory underneath it are what matter.
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Why the Aristocrat Label Now Carries an Asterisk
3M spent decades as one of the market’s marquee Dividend Aristocrats, raising its payout every year for more than six decades. That streak broke in 2024. Following the Solventum spin-off, the quarterly dividend was reset from $1.51 in Q1 2024 to $0.70 in Q2 2024, alongside a $17.3875 special dividend paid on April 1, 2024 tied to the separation.
Purists no longer count MMM as an uninterrupted Aristocrat, though the company continues to be treated as a dividend blue chip by most income indexes.
The recovery arc is visible in the check itself. The quarterly rate has climbed from $0.70 in 2024, to $0.73 in 2025, to $0.78 in 2026. Two consecutive annual raises after a reset is exactly the pattern a rebuilding payer wants to establish.
Can the $3,120 Hold?
Coverage is the reason to take this payout seriously. CEO William Brown has guided full-year 2026 adjusted EPS to $8.50 to $8.70 against a $3.12 dividend, and the company is targeting adjusted operating cash flow of $5.6 billion to $5.8 billion with adjusted free cash flow of $4.6 billion to $4.8 billion.
3M has posted four consecutive quarterly EPS beats, most recently delivering Q1 2026 adjusted EPS of $2.14 on $6.03 billion in revenue with a 23.8% adjusted operating margin.
Capital return is aggressive relative to the dividend line. 3M sent $2.41 billion back to shareholders in Q1 2026 alone through dividends and buybacks, on top of $4.8 billion returned across full-year 2025. Institutions are voting with size: institutional ownership sits at 77.5% of the float.
The offsetting concern is litigation. 3M made $3.5 billion in net pre-tax cash payments tied to PFAS in 2025 and faces a new lawsuit from the New York Attorney General over PFAS contamination, alongside ongoing Combat Arms earplug obligations. Those liabilities are the reason the payout was reset in the first place, and they remain the single largest variable in this dividend’s forward path.
The Bottom Line on 1,000 Shares
A 1,000-share position in 3M requires roughly $160,530 at today’s price and produces about $3,120 in annual passive income at the current quarterly rate. That is a blended yield near 1.94%, backed by a payout ratio comfortably under 40% of guided 2026 adjusted earnings.
For an income investor, the interesting math is the trajectory: two raises since the reset, expanding margins, and free cash flow that dwarfs the dividend leave room for the next hike. The reinvestment case for dividends is compounding, and a growing payout compounds twice: once through the shares purchased, and again through the raises those shares eventually collect.
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Contact editorial@247wallst.com for any questions or corrections.
