Updated March 2025 · 9 min read
Index funds track a market index — like the S&P 500 or TSX Composite — instead of trying to beat it. Decades of data show that most active fund managers underperform their benchmark index over 15+ years, especially after fees. For Canadian investors, index funds are the cornerstone of evidence-based investing.
All-in-one ETFs hold a mix of global equities and bonds in a single fund. They're the simplest starting point for new investors.
| ETF | Allocation | MER | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| VEQT (Vanguard) | 100% global equity | 0.24% | Long horizon, high risk tolerance |
| XEQT (iShares) | 100% global equity | 0.20% | Long horizon, slightly lower cost |
| VGRO (Vanguard) | 80% equity / 20% bonds | 0.24% | Growth with some stability |
| XGRO (iShares) | 80% equity / 20% bonds | 0.20% | Growth with some stability |
| VBAL (Vanguard) | 60% equity / 40% bonds | 0.24% | Balanced, moderate risk |
| XBAL (iShares) | 60% equity / 40% bonds | 0.20% | Balanced, moderate risk |
| VCNS (Vanguard) | 40% equity / 60% bonds | 0.24% | Conservative, near retirement |
| ETF | Index Tracked | MER | Holdings |
|---|---|---|---|
| VCN (Vanguard) | FTSE Canada All Cap | 0.05% | ~180 Canadian stocks |
| XIC (iShares) | S&P/TSX Capped Composite | 0.06% | ~240 Canadian stocks |
| ZCN (BMO) | S&P/TSX Capped Composite | 0.06% | ~240 Canadian stocks |
| ETF | Index Tracked | MER | Currency |
|---|---|---|---|
| VFV (Vanguard) | S&P 500 | 0.09% | CAD |
| XUS (iShares) | S&P 500 | 0.10% | CAD |
| ZSP (BMO) | S&P 500 | 0.09% | CAD |
| VUN (Vanguard) | U.S. Total Market | 0.16% | CAD |
| ETF | Coverage | MER |
|---|---|---|
| VIU (Vanguard) | Developed markets ex-North America | 0.23% |
| XEF (iShares) | Developed markets ex-North America | 0.22% |
| VEE (Vanguard) | Emerging markets | 0.24% |
| XEC (iShares) | Emerging markets | 0.27% |
ETFs are generally preferred over index mutual funds in Canada because:
Exception: TD e-Series mutual funds (MER ~0.33–0.50%) are available directly through TD and are a solid low-cost option, especially for those without a discount brokerage account.
The Canadian Couch Potato portfolio strategy popularized by Dan Bortolotti advocates for holding a simple mix of low-cost index ETFs covering Canada, the U.S., and international markets. The modern version often simplifies to a single all-in-one ETF. See our full Couch Potato guide.
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