Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Index Fund Investing in Canada 2025 — The Simple Path to Wealth

Index investing is the strategy of buying funds that track broad market indices rather than trying to pick individual winners. Decades of evidence show that this simple, low-cost approach outperforms the majority of professionally managed funds over the long run. For most Canadians, index investing is the smartest approach to building long-term wealth.

What Is Index Investing?

An index fund or index ETF tracks a market index — a predefined basket of securities representing a market segment. The S&P 500 index, for example, holds 500 of the largest US companies. A fund tracking it simply holds all those companies in the same proportions. No analysis required, no manager making active decisions, no high fees.

Key fact: Academic studies consistently show that 80–90% of actively managed funds underperform their benchmark index after fees over a 10–20 year period. Index funds win primarily by charging less.

Why Index Funds Beat Most Active Management

Best Canadian Index ETFs

For a simple, all-Canadian approach:

The One-ETF Portfolio

For Canadians who want maximum simplicity, a single all-in-one ETF like VGRO or XGRO is ideal. Buy one ETF, contribute monthly, rebalance automatically (built into the fund). The Couch Potato community has validated this approach for 20+ years — you don't need more than one fund.

Index Investing Inside Registered Accounts

Always hold index ETFs inside your TFSA first, then RRSP. In a TFSA, all growth and income is tax-free. With $7,000/year in TFSA contributions invested in XGRO from age 25, compounding at 7% annually, you'd have over $1.5 million by age 65 — completely tax-free.

When to Start

The best time to start index investing was yesterday. The second best time is today. Market timing consistently destroys returns — the stocks you're waiting for a "better entry point" on often keep rising. Start small if needed, invest consistently, and increase contributions over time.

Common Index Investing Questions

"Should I wait for markets to drop?" No. Studies show lump-sum investing outperforms waiting in the majority of scenarios. If the amount is large and psychologically difficult, dollar-cost average over 6–12 months.

"What if markets crash?" Stay invested. Selling at the bottom locks in losses. Long-term investors who stayed invested through 2008–2009 recovered fully and then grew substantially. Short-term volatility is the price of long-term returns.

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