Expense Ratio

The annual fee charged by a fund as a percentage of assets, covering management and operating costs.

ETFs & Mutual Funds

Definition

The expense ratio is the total annual cost of owning a fund, expressed as a percentage of assets under management. It includes management fees, administrative costs, and other operating expenses. Lower expense ratios directly increase investor returns. The difference between 0.05% and 1.00% compounds dramatically: on $100K over 30 years at 8% return, the higher-fee fund costs ~$160K more.

functions Formula

Annual Fee = Assets × Expense Ratio

lightbulb Example

A $100,000 investment in a fund with 0.75% expense ratio costs $750 annually. An equivalent index fund at 0.03% costs only $30. The $720 annual difference compounds to over $30,000 over 20 years.

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Pro Tip

A 1% difference in expense ratio can reduce your portfolio value by 25-30% over a 30-year investment period.

verified_user Key Points

  • Lower is better—directly impacts returns
  • Index funds: 0.03-0.10%; active funds: 0.50-1.50%
  • Compounding fee impact is enormous over decades
  • Total cost includes expense ratio + trading costs + taxes

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