How I'd invest $100,000 for retirement income on the ASX right now

This is a durable portfolio delivering retirement income today for Australian retirees.

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Building a retirement portfolio isn't about chasing the highest yield. It's about creating a mix of reliable dividends, diversification, and enough growth to keep up with inflation.

If I were building a $100,000 ASX retirement income portfolio today, I'd blend three quality dividend shares with two ETFs.

Here's how I'd do it.

Retired couple hugging and laughing.

Image source: Getty Images

Reliable earnings and payouts

I'd start with $25,000 in APA Group Ltd (ASX: APA). The infrastructure giant currently offers a dividend yield of about 6.1%, backed by essential gas pipelines and electricity assets that generate long-term contracted cash flow. That kind of reliability is ideal for retirees seeking a consistent retirement income. 

Next, I'd allocate $20,000 to ANZ Group Holdings Ltd (ASX: ANZ). While the yield is a little below your original 5% screen at roughly 4.5%, the partially franked dividend and resilient banking earnings still make it highly attractive for income investors. Banks remain some of the most dependable dividend payers on the ASX. 

For a third direct shareholding, I'd put $15,000 into Transurban Group (ASX: TCL).

Like APA, it owns hard-to-replicate infrastructure assets, with toll roads across Sydney, Melbourne, and North America. Traffic-linked revenue provides inflation pass-through over time, which can help preserve purchasing power in retirement.

High-yielding blue chips and bonds

Now for the ETFs in the retirement portfolio.

I'd allocate $25,000 to the Vanguard Australian Shares High Yield ETF (ASX: VHY). This ETF gives instant exposure to a basket of Australia's highest-yielding blue-chip shares, including banks, miners, and telcos. It reduces single-stock risk while keeping the income focus front and centre.

The final $15,000 would go into the Vanguard Australian Fixed Interest ETF (ASX: VAF). Bonds might not be exciting, but they add portfolio stability and help smooth out volatility when equity markets get rough.

This blend gives you 60% in direct quality dividend shares, 25% in diversified high-yield equities, and 15% in defensive bonds. It could deliver a blended yield of around 5.3% to 5.8%, along with solid exposure to franking credits and inflation-linked infrastructure.

On a $100,000 portfolio, that could mean $5,300 to $5,800 per year in cash income, before any dividend growth.

Foolish Takeaway

What I really like about this setup is the balance.

APA and Transurban provide infrastructure-style resilience, and ANZ adds partially franked bank income. The Vanguard ETF broadens exposure, while the fixed interest ETF reduces sequence risk, which becomes increasingly important once you're drawing an income.

For an Australian retiree, this is the kind of portfolio that can help generate retirement income today without sacrificing long-term durability.

Motley Fool contributor Marc Van Dinther has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Transurban Group. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Apa Group and Transurban Group. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Vanguard Australian Shares High Yield ETF. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

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