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Comparison · Finance

ETF vs Mutual Fund

ETFs and mutual funds both pool investor money to buy a basket of securities. They diverge on three things that actually matter: how you buy and sell, the tax bill at year end, and what they cost to own. For most taxable-account investors, the ETF wins on all three.

Factor ETF Mutual Fund
How shares trade Intraday on stock exchange like a stock Once per day at NAV close
Typical expense ratio 0.03%–0.20% (index ETFs) 0.50%–1.50% (actively managed)
Tax efficiency High (in-kind redemption avoids capital gains) Lower (forced cap gains distributions)
Minimum investment 1 share (often $50–$500) Usually $1,000–$3,000 minimum
Fractional shares At most brokers (Robinhood, Fidelity) Standard — dollar amounts allowed
Automatic investment plans Limited (broker-dependent) Standard — auto-buy any dollar amount
Active management options Growing but still limited Vast universe of active funds

Choose ETF when…

Taxable brokerage account, want lowest fees, want to control buy/sell timing intraday, plan to hold long term, comfortable buying whole shares.

Choose Mutual Fund when…

Tax-advantaged account (IRA/401k where tax efficiency doesn't matter), want automatic dollar-cost-averaging into specific dollar amounts, actively managed strategies are critical, or your 401(k) only offers mutual funds.

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Frequently asked questions

Why are ETFs more tax-efficient?

ETFs use an "in-kind" redemption process — when a large investor exits, they receive the underlying securities instead of cash, so the fund never has to sell appreciated holdings and trigger capital gains. Mutual funds must sell to meet redemptions, distributing those gains pro-rata to all holders.

Are index ETFs better than index mutual funds?

In taxable accounts, almost always yes (tax efficiency). In IRAs/401(k)s, they are roughly equivalent — pick whichever has the lower expense ratio. Vanguard's index mutual funds are competitive because of their unique ETF share-class structure.

Can ETFs go to zero like stocks?

A broad-market ETF (VTI, VOO) effectively cannot — it would require the entire market to go to zero. Sector or leveraged ETFs can. Single-issuer "synthetic" ETFs have counterparty risk if the issuing bank fails.

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