
Chasing dividend yield at any price is a mistake.
A high yield sitting on top of a deteriorating business is rarely worth the risk.
The better approach is to find quality businesses that have pulled back enough to make their dividend yield attractive again.
These three well-known ASX dividend shares fit that description right now.
Wesfarmers Ltd (ASX: WES)
Wesfarmers is down about 9% from the all-time high of $95.18 it set in August last year.
That pullback has not been driven by a deteriorating business.
In the first half of FY2026, Wesfarmers delivered net profit after tax of $1.603 billion, up 9.3% on the prior corresponding period. Reassuringly, Bunnings and Kmart both continue to deliver strong sales growth.
The board lifted its fully franked interim dividend by 7.4% to $1.02 per share, a clear signal of confidence in the underlying cash generation.
At the lower share price, that growing dividend now goes further.
CMC Invest forecasts an annual dividend of $2.20 per share for FY2026, implying a forward yield of approximately 2.54%. That figure is expected to climb further as the dividend continues to grow into FY2027.
Wesfarmers has increased its dividend every year since divesting Coles in 2020. This streak gives income investors a degree of confidence in the trajectory of consistent dividend compounding.
BHP Group Ltd (ASX: BHP)
BHP offers a higher starting yield than Wesfarmers, backed by one of the strongest commodity tailwinds on the ASX.
BHP’s dividend is highly cyclical, swinging from $4.63 per share in 2022 to just $1.71 per share in 2025, before the trend reversed with a 2026 interim dividend of $1.04 per share, a healthy rise over the prior year’s 79 cents.
Including the September final dividend, BHP currently has a trailing 12-month payout of $1.96 per share. This is fully franked, putting the trailing yield at approximately 3.3% at current prices.
For Australian taxpayers, the full franking on that yield is important. This effectively lifts the after-tax return well above the headline figure for shareholders in the 30% tax bracket. What’s more, the franking lifts the after-tax return even further for those in pension-phase superannuation accounts able to claim the full cash refund.
The dividend backdrop has been reinforced by BHP’s copper exposure, with copper earnings now exceeding iron ore contributions for the first time in the company’s history. This comes as demand for AI data centres and electrification drives the copper price to record levels.
This tailwind gives the BHP dividend more support than its historical cyclicality alone would suggest.
Telstra Group Ltd (ASX: TLS)
Telstra is the most defensive of the three, and its dividend track record reflects that.
Shareholders have not seen a dividend cut since 2019 and have enjoyed an annual dividend increase every year since 2022.
Telstra’s most recent interim dividend came in at 9.5 cents per share, fully franked, matching the equivalent payout from 2025. This brings the trailing annual total to 19 cents per share and a trailing yield of approximately 3.7%.
Brokers see further growth ahead. UBS forecasts Telstra paying 21 cents per share in FY2026, implying a grossed-up yield of approximately 6.2% including franking credits.
Moreover, Morgan Stanley separately forecasts 20 cents per share with a price target implying further capital upside on top of the dividend.
Telstra’s mobile division, the largest network in Australia, continues to underpin that earnings growth through pricing power and steady subscriber growth.
The lesson for these ASX dividend shares
Each of these three businesses has pulled back for reasons that are largely cyclical or sentiment-driven rather than structural.
Wesfarmers fell on broader retail sector caution despite delivering double-digit profit growth.
BHP’s yield swings with the commodity cycle.
Telstra has simply continued growing its dividend through a defensive, less exciting period for the broader market.
That combination of real earnings growth and a lower entry price is exactly what makes these ASX dividend shares well priced.
Foolish takeaway
Wesfarmers, BHP, and Telstra all offer a different entry point into ASX dividend shares right now.
Wesfarmers offers the lowest starting yield but the most consistent growth track record. BHP offers a higher cyclical yield backed by a genuine structural copper tailwind. Telstra offers the most defensive earnings base and a long, uninterrupted streak of dividend growth.
For income investors prepared to look past the headlines, all three remain well-priced options on the ASX today.
The post There are still some well-priced ASX dividend shares. Here’s where to look appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Mark Verhoeven 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 Wesfarmers. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Telstra Group. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended BHP Group and Wesfarmers. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.