P

Personal Finance

— Building wealth and financial literacy
31 members Created Jun 2026

Index fund expense ratios: why 0.03% vs 0.5% matters enormously

The difference between 0.03% (VTI) and 0.50% (a typical actively managed domestic equity fund) seems tiny. Let me show you why it isn't.

Starting with $50,000, contributing $500/month for 35 years, at 7% average annual return:

  • 0.03% expense ratio: approximately $1,082,000
  • 0.50% expense ratio: approximately $990,000

That's $92,000 lost to a fee difference of 0.47%. And that's assuming the active fund matches the index fund's gross return, which on average it doesn't.

The practical takeaway: when evaluating any fund, the expense ratio is the one number that is completely predictable. High-fee funds need to consistently outperform low-fee funds just to break even. The data says they generally don't.

6

No comments yet

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Report thread

Why are you reporting this thread?

Restore the redacted content?

This will make it visible to everyone again. The clear action is logged in the mod log.