What Is an ETF? (And Why It's the Easiest Way to Start Investing)
If youβve ever been told to βjust buy an index fundβ but werenβt sure what that actually means, this is for you. An ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund) lets you invest in hundreds of companies with a single purchase, for essentially zero fees. Hereβs what they are, how they compare to stocks and mutual funds, and which ones are worth buying.
An ETF in 30 seconds
An ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund) is a basket of investments β stocks, bonds, or other assets β bundled into a single fund that trades on the stock exchange just like a regular stock. When you buy one share of an S&P 500 ETF like VOO, you're effectively buying a tiny piece of all 500 companies in the index.
Think of it like a sampler platter at a restaurant instead of ordering 500 individual dishes.
Why ETFs are the easiest way to invest
- Instant diversification: One purchase spreads your money across hundreds or thousands of companies. If one company fails, it barely affects your portfolio.
- Extremely low fees: The best ETFs charge 0.03-0.10% per year. That's $3 to $10 for every $10,000 invested β essentially nothing.
- No minimum investment: With fractional shares, you can buy $1 worth of any ETF. You don't need $500+ for a single full share.
- Trade like stocks: Unlike mutual funds (which only trade once per day), ETFs can be bought and sold any time during market hours at real-time prices.
- Tax efficient: ETFs are generally more tax-efficient than mutual funds due to their unique creation/redemption process.
ETF vs individual stocks
| Feature | ETFs | Individual stocks |
|---|---|---|
| Diversification | Hundreds/thousands of stocks | One company |
| Research required | Minimal | Significant |
| Risk if one company fails | Negligible | Could lose everything |
| Potential upside | Market average | Unlimited (if you pick right) |
| Fees | 0.03-0.20% | $0 commission |
| Best for | Most investors | Experienced stock pickers |
The data is clear: over any 15-year period, roughly 90% of actively managed funds (run by professional stock pickers) fail to beat a simple S&P 500 index ETF. If the professionals can't consistently beat the market, the odds aren't in your favour either.
ETF vs mutual funds
ETFs and index mutual funds (like Vanguard's VFIAX) often track the same index and have similar fees. The main differences:
- Trading: ETFs trade throughout the day like stocks. Mutual funds only trade at end-of-day prices.
- Minimum investment: ETFs have no minimum (with fractional shares). Mutual funds often require $1,000-3,000 to start.
- Tax efficiency: ETFs are slightly more tax-efficient in taxable accounts due to their structure.
- Automatic investing: Mutual funds make automatic recurring purchases easier at some brokers. ETFs are catching up on this.
For most people, the differences are marginal. If your 401k offers index mutual funds, use those. For taxable and IRA accounts, ETFs are generally the better choice.
The best ETFs for beginners
You can build a complete, globally diversified portfolio with just 2-3 ETFs:
| ETF | What it tracks | Expense ratio | Use case |
|---|---|---|---|
| VTI | Total US stock market | 0.03% | Core US holding |
| VXUS | International stocks (ex-US) | 0.07% | International diversification |
| BND | US total bond market | 0.03% | Stability / reduce volatility |
| VOO | S&P 500 | 0.03% | Alternative to VTI |
| VT | Total world stock market | 0.07% | Single-fund global portfolio |
The simplest possible portfolio: 100% VT (Vanguard Total World Stock ETF). One fund, every stock market in the world, 0.07% fees. You can literally build a complete portfolio with a single purchase. For a deeper comparison of the most popular options, read our VOO vs VTI comparison.
How to buy your first ETF
- Open a brokerage account β Fidelity, Schwab, Vanguard, or Interactive Brokers all offer commission-free ETF trading.
- Deposit funds β Transfer money from your bank account (takes 1-3 business days).
- Search for the ticker β Type "VTI" or "VOO" in the search bar.
- Place a buy order β Enter the dollar amount or number of shares. Use a "market order" for simplicity.
- Set up auto-invest β Schedule monthly recurring purchases to automate dollar-cost averaging.
The entire process takes about 15 minutes. Check out our full beginner's guide to investing for detailed step-by-step instructions.
See how any ETF has performed
Use our stock return calculator to check the historical returns of any ETF β see what $10,000 invested 5, 10, or 20 years ago would be worth today.
Open stock return calculator βThings to watch out for
- Avoid niche/thematic ETFs: ARK Innovation, marijuana ETFs, meme stock ETFs β these are speculative, expensive, and underperform broad index funds the vast majority of the time.
- Check the expense ratio: Anything above 0.20% should require a good reason. The best ETFs charge 0.03%.
- Beware of leveraged ETFs: 2x or 3x leveraged ETFs are designed for day traders, not long-term investors. They can lose money even when the underlying index goes up due to daily rebalancing decay.
- Don't over-diversify: Owning 15 different ETFs doesn't make you more diversified β it makes you confused. VTI alone holds ~4,000 stocks. You don't need more diversification than that.
This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or tax advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Always consult a qualified financial adviser before making investment decisions.