Quick Read
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PZA’s 217 consecutive monthly payments since 2007 draw from pure investment-grade coupon income, generating a 3.65% federal tax-free yield with no leverage or gimmicks.
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SCMB delivers the same AMT-aware muni exposure as PZA for just 0.03% versus PZA’s 0.28%, saving 25 basis points that compound meaningfully over a decade.
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For high earners hunting tax-free monthly income, the Invesco National AMT-Free Municipal Bond ETF (NYSEARCA:PZA) has become a reliable workhorse. PZA pays a 3.65% federal tax-free yield through monthly distributions, and it has now strung together 217 consecutive payments since 2007 without a miss. The question facing income investors is whether that streak rests on durable bond interest or on a yield level that the next leg of the rate cycle could squeeze. The data tilts clearly toward durable.
How PZA Turns Muni Interest Into Monthly Checks
PZA tracks the ICE BofAML National Long-Term Core Plus Municipal Securities Index, a basket of investment-grade municipal bonds issued by U.S. states, cities, school districts, and revenue authorities. The defining filter is the AMT screen: every bond in the portfolio is structured so its interest does not feed the alternative minimum tax calculation. That matters because the 2026 AMT exemption phases out at $500,000 for single filers and $1,000,000 for joint filers, exactly the income tier this fund is built for.
Income flows in one direction. Issuers pay semiannual coupons into the trust, Invesco pools the cash, deducts the 0.28% expense ratio, and distributes the rest monthly. There is no options overlay, no leverage, no return-of-capital game. The yield is bond coupons, full stop.
What Actually Drives Distribution Safety
Three things determine whether PZA’s monthly check holds up: credit quality, the reinvestment yield on maturing bonds, and duration risk.
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On credit, the index is restricted to investment-grade issues, and municipal default rates in this tier have historically run a fraction of corporate defaults. A water utility or state general-obligation bond is not Tesla paper. Distribution risk from credit losses is therefore minor.
On reinvestment, the trend is a tailwind. Monthly distributions climbed from a $0.05 to $0.06 range in 2022 to roughly $0.07 across 2026 year to date. The May 2026 payment of $0.07 sits near the top of that band. As older low-coupon bonds mature, Invesco is replacing them with paper issued into today’s higher-rate market, which is feeding the rising distribution.
