Compare expense ratios, holdings, dividend yields, and performance across popular ETFs. Click any ETF for a detailed breakdown.
Tracks the S&P 500 index. One of the most popular and lowest-cost ways to invest in large-cap US stocks.
The original S&P 500 ETF and the most traded ETF in the world. Highly liquid with tight spreads.
Tracks the Nasdaq-100 index, providing exposure to the largest non-financial companies listed on NASDAQ.
BlackRock's S&P 500 tracker with extremely low expense ratio. A core holding for many portfolios.
Covers the entire US stock market including small, mid, and large-cap stocks in a single fund.
Focuses on high-quality US dividend-paying stocks. Popular among income-focused investors.
Tracks an index of US stocks with above-average dividend yields. Broad diversification at low cost.
Generates income through equity-linked notes and S&P 500 stocks. High monthly distributions.
Concentrated exposure to the US technology sector including Apple, Microsoft, and NVIDIA.
Targets the semiconductor industry including NVIDIA, TSMC, and Broadcom. High-growth sector play.
Actively managed fund focused on disruptive innovation across genomics, AI, fintech, and autonomous tech.
Tracks the price of gold bullion. A popular hedge against inflation and market uncertainty.
Exposure to long-term US Treasury bonds. Sensitive to interest rate changes, used for rate bets and hedging.
Broad exposure to US investment-grade bonds. A core fixed-income holding for diversified portfolios.
Covers international stocks from developed and emerging markets, excluding the US.
Lower expense ratios mean more of your money stays invested. Index ETFs like VOO charge as low as 0.03%, while actively managed funds can charge 0.50% or more.
Review long-term performance (3-5 years) rather than short-term gains. Past performance does not guarantee future results, but consistency matters.