3 ASX blue chips I’d buy for a $250,000 retirement portfolio

An older woman with a huge smile on her face having just touched down on the ground from skydiving.

Building a retirement portfolio isn’t about chasing the highest yield on the ASX. It’s about owning businesses that can keep paying you through market cycles, inflation shocks, and economic slowdowns.

If I were building a $250,000 retirement-focused ASX portfolio today, I’d split it across APA Group (ASX: APA), Woolworths Group Ltd (ASX: WOW), and Transurban Group (ASX: TCL).

Together, they offer the three ingredients retirees need most: income, stability, and inflation protection. 

APA Group: Income engine

First, I’d put $100,000 into APA Group, making it the retirement portfolio’s income engine.

APA owns critical energy infrastructure assets including gas pipelines, storage, and electricity transmission networks. These are long-life, hard-to-replace assets that generate highly visible cash flow.

APA has paid semi-annual dividends in March and September since 2016, with a track record dating back to 2008. Impressively, it has increased its payout every year for the past 20 years.

Better yet, the stock is currently offering a dividend yield of roughly 6%, giving retirees a strong stream of passive income from day one. 

Woolworths: Resilient earnings and dividends

Next, I’d allocate $75,000 to Woolworths.

Every retirement portfolio needs at least one ultra-defensive blue chip, and it’s hard to look past Australia’s supermarket giant.

People keep buying groceries no matter what the economy is doing, which helps Woolworths deliver resilient earnings and reliable, partly franked dividends.

The company’s scale, loyalty ecosystem, and digital investments also give it the ability to grow income steadily over time. 

Transurban: Inflation hedge

Finally, I’d invest the remaining $75,000 into Transurban.

This is where the retirement portfolio gets its inflation hedge. Transurban’s toll roads are essential infrastructure assets with concession lives stretching decades into the future.

Many toll agreements allow regular price increases linked to inflation, which means rising CPI can actually support higher distributions over time. For retirees worried about the cost of living, that’s an incredibly valuable feature. 

Dependable income layer

Based on conservative yield assumptions, this retirement portfolio could generate around $11,700 a year in passive income, or close to $975 per month before tax.

That won’t fund a luxury retirement on its own, but combined with superannuation, pension payments, or other investments, it creates a highly dependable income layer.

Foolish Takeaway

What I like most is the balance. APA does the heavy lifting on yield. Woolworths provides the “sleep well at night” stability. Transurban helps protect purchasing power as inflation rises.

For long-term retirees, that’s exactly the kind of mix that can help preserve both income and peace of mind.

The best part? These aren’t speculative growth stocks. They’re essential businesses embedded into everyday Australian life, which is exactly why they deserve a place in a serious retirement portfolio.

The post 3 ASX blue chips I’d buy for a $250,000 retirement portfolio appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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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, Transurban Group, and Woolworths Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.