Raising a child in Singapore is getting more and more expensive.
From the recurring cost of diapers and milk formula to the escalating fees for childcare, the financial pressure on young parents can feel overwhelming.
While the Singapore government provides support through various Baby Bonus schemes and grants, these funds are often insufficient to cover the long-term, recurring costs of raising a child over many years.
However, by constructing a targeted dividend-producing portfolio, it is possible to generate a reliable S$200 monthly payout to bridge the gap.
This translates to S$2,400 a year, which is a significant sum when viewed through the lens of essential baby supplies.
In the early years, this amount can comfortably cover a year’s worth of diapers and a substantial portion of milk powder requirements.
As the child grows, this same stream can be redirected towards school fees or enrichment classes.
With small, disciplined investments, parents can yield real-world relief, reduce financial stress, and focus on milestones rather than receipts.
The Strategy: Build a Reliable Dividend Base First
When you are counting on dividends to pay for necessities, consistency is more important than chasing the highest possible yield.
Focus on a blend of robust blue-chip stocks and resilient Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), chosen for their ability to weather economic cycles and maintain their distributions even during periods of market turbulence.
By prioritising sustainability and resilience, parents ensure that the cash flow remains steady.
Furthermore, any excess income generated during months with lower expenses should be immediately reinvested, harnessing the power of compounding to expand the portfolio’s reach over time.
DBS Group (SGX: D05) — The Income Anchor
DBS serves as the bedrock of this income-focused portfolio.
As Singapore’s largest bank, its massive wealth management franchise reached a record S$488 billion in assets under management by the end of 2025.
This scale provides an unparalleled level of stability and a dominant market position.
For the financial year ended 31 December 2025 (FY2025), DBS demonstrated its resilience by delivering a return on equity (ROE) of 16.2%, even as it navigated a shifting interest rate environment.
The most compelling reason for its inclusion is its generous capital return policy.
DBS declared total dividends of S$3.06 per share for FY2025, a massive 38% increase year on year (YoY).
This payout includes a S$0.60 capital return dividend which the bank expects to maintain through FY2026 and FY2027, barring unforeseen circumstances.
This anchor ensures that the fundamental payout of the portfolio remains robust, backed by record fee income and disciplined cost management.
CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (SGX: C38U), or CICT — The Steady Payer
One of Singapore’s largest REITs, CICT offers essential exposure to prime retail and office real estate.
For its first quarter of 2026 (1Q2026), CICT reported a strong 8.0% YoY increase in gross revenue to S$426.7 million, while net property income (NPI) grew 7.9% to S$314.4 million.
This growth was bolstered by strategic moves, such as the full acquisition of CapitaSpring and maiden contributions from its Gallileo property.
For parents, CICT’s value lies in its proactive portfolio management and steady operational metrics.
As of March 2026, the REIT maintained a healthy committed occupancy of 95.2% and saw positive rental reversions of 4.4% for retail and 6.1% for office spaces.
Furthermore, CICT is positioning itself for future growth through the proposed acquisition of Paragon and a S$160 million enhancement initiative at Plaza Singapura and The Atrium@Orchard.
While it distributes on a half-yearly basis, the indicated pro forma DPU accretion of 1.7% from recent deals underscores its ability to enhance unitholder value.
This steady payer provides the backbone of the portfolio, anchored by iconic Singaporean assets and a disciplined growth strategy.
Mapletree Industrial Trust (SGX: ME8U), or MIT — The Growth Income Play
MIT provides a strategic tilt towards the digital economy with a S$8.5 billion portfolio spanning 136 properties across Singapore, North America, and Japan.
While the REIT faced headwinds in the third quarter ending 31 December 2025 (3QFY2026) due to divestments and a weaker US dollar – resulting in a gross revenue of S$163.1 million – its underlying operational strength remains intact.
MIT is successfully transitioning its portfolio towards high-growth assets like data centres, which are the backbone of the global digital infrastructure.
Crucially for income investors, MIT is actively refreshing its portfolio to sustain payouts.
While the distribution per unit (DPU) of S$0.0317 for the quarter reflected a YoY decline, the manager is recycling capital effectively, having completed S$535.3 million in divestments of older Singapore industrial properties to fund newer, higher-yielding opportunities.
With portfolio occupancy improving to 91.4% and the securing of long-term leases – such as a 13-year commitment in Tempe – MIT represents a resilient “growth income” play that ensures the “diaper fund” can evolve with the digital age.
How the S$200 Monthly Income Is Built
To generate S$200 a month (S$2,400 annually) at a blended portfolio yield of 5%, you need a total investment of S$48,000.
While this sounds substantial, it is a destination rather than a starting point.
By using government cash gifts as a seed and contributing S$800 to S$1,000 monthly, you can reach this milestone incrementally.
Reinvesting every dividend received further accelerates this journey, turning consistent discipline into a self-sustaining income stream.
What I Learned Along the Way
Building a dividend stream for your child is as much about mindset as it is about math.
The psychological shift from being a consumer to an owner is empowering; seeing a dividend deposit cover a box of diapers builds immense confidence.
However, long-term success requires avoiding common traps like falling into “yields traps” – stocks with high yields that are unsustainable due to poor free cash flow.
It is far better to own a company with a growing 4% payout than one with a risky 10% yield that faces a potential cut.
Discipline is your greatest asset.
Many investors fail by overconcentrating in a single stock or reacting to short-term market noise, which only leads to unnecessary transaction costs.
Instead, prioritise dividend sustainability and diversification across sectors to ensure your income stream doesn’t disappear if one company hits a rough patch.
Remember that wealth is built over time, not overnight.
By starting early and letting compounding do the heavy lifting, you allow patience and consistency to turn modest monthly contributions into a resilient financial safety net.
Get Smart: Start Small, Think Big
You do not need a massive six-figure portfolio to start making a meaningful difference in your family’s financial life.
A S$200 monthly dividend stream may seem small, but it can meaningfully offset real-life expenses and provide a foundation for future wealth.
The beauty of this strategy is that these assets don’t stop paying when your child outgrows diapers.
Long after the toddler years, this portfolio will continue providing passive income that can fund university degrees, family vacations, or even your own retirement.
Focus on quality companies to build a defensive asset base that grows with your family.
The key is consistency, discipline, and letting time do the heavy lifting.
Markets are volatile again. Oil prices are rising and tech stocks are swinging.
What matters now is not predicting what comes next, but knowing how to act.
In this webinar, our Co-Founders, Chin Hui Leong and Joanna Sng, share a clear, three-layer framework for navigating uncertainty. Register your spot here.
If you want to retire with a constant stream of dividends, these 5 stocks might be all you need. We’ve found 5 SG stocks that have kept paying (and growing) through inflation, rate hikes, and recessions. See what they are with our latest free report for SGX dividend investors. Click here to get instant access.
Follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Telegram for the latest investing news and analyses!
Disclosure: Calvina L. owns shares of DBS.



