
Telstra Group Ltd (ASX: TLS) shares are not an investment I would look at for excitement or rapid growth.Â
Australia’s telecommunications leader is one I revisit when I’m thinking about income and resilience.
At the moment, there are a few reasons why Telstra stands out to me as a stock that could be worth considering.
Telstra shares offer a dependable income stream
The main reason Telstra shares appeal to me at current prices is income certainty. Telstra’s dividend is no longer based on hope or asset sales, but on recurring cash flows from its core mobile and infrastructure businesses.
According to CommSec, consensus estimates point to fully-franked dividends per share of 20 cents in FY26 and 21 cents in FY27. At today’s share price of $4.80, that translates to dividend yields of around 4.2% and 4.4%.
For a large, defensive ASX stock, those are solid yields, particularly when backed by improving cash flow discipline. The fact that the dividends are expected to be fully franked only strengthens the income appeal for Australian investors in the current environment.
Defensive qualities in an uncertain environment
Telstra’s services are not discretionary. Mobile connectivity, data usage, and network access are embedded in everyday life for households, businesses, and government.
That gives Telstra a defensive edge that becomes more valuable when economic conditions are uncertain. People might cut back on spending elsewhere, but they don’t cancel their phone plans or stop using data. I see that resilience as a quiet strength, especially for investors who want exposure to equities without taking on excessive volatility.
Operational focus is improving
What has changed my view on Telstra over time is not just the dividend, but the company’s renewed focus on execution.
Management is no longer chasing too many moving parts at once. The business is more streamlined, capital allocation is clearer, and there is a stronger emphasis on getting acceptable returns from existing assets rather than chasing transformational growth. That doesn’t make for exciting headlines, but it does improve the quality and reliability of earnings.
For me, Telstra today looks less like a turnaround story and more like a steady operator that knows what it is good at.
Foolish Takeaway
Telstra isn’t going to double overnight. It’s not that type of stock. At around $4.80, I think the shares offer a reasonable balance of value, income, defensiveness, and stability.
For investors who want a reliable component in their portfolio rather than something to trade around, Telstra shares could be worth a closer look at current levels.
The post 3 reasons Telstra shares could be worth buying today appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
Should you invest $1,000 in Telstra Corporation Limited right now?
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* Returns as of 1 Jan 2026
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More reading
- Got $5,000? 5 ASX income shares to buy and hold forever
- How to build income on the ASX without losing sleep at night
- 5 ASX dividend shares paying 4% a year on average in 2026!
- Telstra shares’ last all-time high? It will shock you
- Forget term deposits! I’d buy these two ASX 200 shares instead
Motley Fool contributor Grace Alvino has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Telstra Group. 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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