ETF vs Mutual Fund Cost Differences
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and mutual funds serve similar purposes—pooling investor money to buy diversified portfolios—but have crucial cost differences that significantly impact long-term returns.
Expense ratios are the primary ongoing cost: ETFs average 0.16% annually, while actively managed mutual funds average 0.66% and even index mutual funds average 0.06-0.20%.
This seems small, but on a $100,000 investment over 30 years, 0.50% in extra fees costs approximately $45,000 in lost returns (assuming 8% annual growth).
Beyond expense ratios, mutual funds often include additional fees: front-end loads (sales charges of 3-5.75% when buying), back-end loads (fees when selling, typically 1-5%), 12b-1 fees (ongoing marketing fees of 0.25-1%), and redemption fees (charges for selling within 30-90 days).
These can add 1-6% to total costs.
ETFs typically have no loads or 12b-1 fees but involve trading costs: brokerage commissions (often $0 at major brokers now), bid-ask spreads (the difference between buying and selling price, typically 0.01-0.10% for liquid ETFs), and potential premiums/discounts to net asset value (usually minimal for popular ETFs).
Tax efficiency is a hidden cost where ETFs excel: ETF structure allows in-kind redemptions, avoiding capital gains distributions; mutual funds must sell holdings to meet redemptions, generating taxable capital gains distributed to all shareholders.
The average actively managed mutual fund distributes 1-5% of assets as capital gains annually, triggering taxes even if you didn't sell.
ETFs rarely distribute capital gains.
For taxable accounts, this tax drag can cost 0.5-1.5% annually, compounding to enormous differences over decades.
In tax-advantaged accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s), this doesn't matter.
The verdict: for most investors, low-cost index ETFs offer superior cost structure—lower expense ratios, no loads, better tax efficiency.
However, mutual funds still make sense for: 401(k) plans where ETFs aren't available, automatic investment plans (harder with ETFs), and specific actively managed strategies.