An ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund) is a basket of securities — stocks, bonds, or other assets — that trades on a stock exchange like a single stock. When you buy one share of VTI (Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF), you instantly own a tiny piece of over 4,000 US companies.
ETFs combine the diversification of mutual funds with the trading flexibility of stocks. They typically have very low expense ratios (annual fees) because most track an index rather than relying on active management.
ETF: Basket of securities, trades like a stock, typically low fees, tax-efficient. Mutual fund: Basket of securities, priced once daily, may have higher fees and minimums. Stock: Ownership in one company, higher risk, no built-in diversification. For most long-term investors, ETFs offer the best combination of diversification, low cost, and flexibility.
| ETF | What It Tracks | Expense Ratio | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| VTI | Total US Stock Market (4,000+ stocks) | 0.03% | Core US holding |
| VOO | S&P 500 (500 largest US companies) | 0.03% | Large-cap US exposure |
| VXUS | Total International Stock Market | 0.07% | International diversification |
| BND | Total US Bond Market | 0.03% | Bond allocation |
| QQQ | Nasdaq-100 (tech-heavy) | 0.20% | Tech sector exposure |
| SCHD | Dividend stocks | 0.06% | Dividend income |
The simplest evidence-based portfolio uses just 2–3 ETFs:
Option 1 (Aggressive, age 20–40): 80% VTI + 20% VXUS
Option 2 (Balanced, age 40–55): 60% VTI + 20% VXUS + 20% BND
Option 3 (Conservative, age 55+): 40% VTI + 20% VXUS + 40% BND
Rebalance once per year to maintain your target allocation.
The expense ratio is the annual fee you pay to own an ETF, expressed as a percentage of your investment. A 0.03% expense ratio means you pay $0.30 per year on $1,000 invested. A 1% expense ratio means you pay $10 per year on $1,000 invested.
Over 30 years, the difference between a 0.03% and 1.0% expense ratio on a $100,000 portfolio is approximately $180,000 in lost returns due to compounding. Always choose the lowest-cost ETF that tracks your desired index.