The Best ETFs and How They Fit in Your Portfolio (2024)

ETFs

Explore the different types of ETFs and what we see as top options.

The Best ETFs and How They Fit in Your Portfolio (1)

The Best ETFs and How They Fit in Your Portfolio (2)

Margaret Giles

Exchange-traded funds make it easy to diversify a portfolio and are often easier for investors to buy than their mutual fund counterparts. That’s because they’re traded on an exchange and don’t have the investment minimums that some mutual funds do.

But not all ETFs are alike. There are many options to choose from, so it’s important to identify high-quality ETFs that meet the needs of your portfolio. Morningstar rates ETFs relative to their category peers, so you can find best-in-class options in the areas that are important to you.

We break down our list of the best ETFs by category, so you can understand the roles these funds can play in your portfolio as you consider your options.

IN THIS ARTICLE
  • How to Find the Best ETFs for Your Portfolio
  • How Does Morningstar Determine Which ETFs are the Best?
  • The Best Stock ETFs
  • The Best Large-Cap U.S. Stock ETFs
  • The Best International Stock ETFs
  • The Best Small- and Mid-Cap U.S. Stock ETFs
  • The Best Bond ETFs
  • The Best Intermediate- and Long-Term Bond ETFs
  • The Best Short-Term and Inflation-Protected Bond ETFs

How to Find the Best ETFs for Your Portfolio

The first step to finding the best ETF for you is understanding its role in your portfolio.

Start by determining your asset allocation—the mix of stocks, bonds, cash, and other investments in your portfolio. Factors like your investing timeline, risk tolerance and capacity, and investing goals make your “right” asset-allocation mix unique to you, but Morningstar’s Christine Benz recommends using the Morningstar Lifetime Allocation Indexes as a starting point.

Once you have a sense of an appropriate asset-allocation mix, you can think of your investments as building blocks. The largest and most important components are your core holdings, or the assets that make up the majority of your portfolio’s assets. Once those positions are filled, you can choose to add noncore holdings that play a smaller role in your portfolio.

Core investments should be broadly diversified, low-cost funds that cover the major asset classes:

  • U.S. stocks
  • Foreign stocks
  • High-quality bonds

You can further diversify by adding other asset classes or subasset classes, but a portfolio made of core holdings can stand on its own. Still, even simple diversification can reduce the risk in your portfolio by lowering the chances that all your investments lose value at the same time.

Whether a key building block in your portfolio or a niche addition, there are ETFs that fit nearly every role.

Category

A category is a way to group investments based on similar risk, return, and behavior profiles.

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Passive Fund

Passive funds track an index with the goal of replicating that benchmark's return. Passive funds' management teams don’t choose specific investments for the portfolio in an attempt to outperform an index, as managers of active funds do.

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Asset Allocation

Asset allocation is the process of distributing money across different asset classes to maximize portfolio returns and minimize risk.

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Morningstar Medalist Rating for Funds

The Morningstar Medalist Rating for funds is a five-tier system used to analyze how fees will impact different securities in the long term.

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International Stock Fund

An international stock fund is an investment vehicle holding a collection of stocks from non-U.S. countries.

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How Does Morningstar Determine Which ETFs are the Best?

The best ETFs receive Morningstar Medalist Ratings of Gold, the highest rating on a five-tier scale that consists of Gold, Silver, Bronze, Neutral, and Negative.

The Morningstar Medalist Rating may be assigned by an analyst or driven by quantitative algorithms that allow Morningstar to scale its fund coverage. To narrow the scope of this list, the funds below have ratings assigned by analysts.

The Morningstar Medalist Rating is a forward-looking measure of Morningstar’s confidence in a fund’s ability to beat its peers, after accounting for fees and risk, through a market cycle. Medals (Gold, Silver, and Bronze) indicate that analysts expect a fund to outperform its peers over a full market cycle; Neutral and Negative ratings mean that analysts aren’t confident in a fund’s ability to do so.

A fund’s rating is based on an assessment of the fund managers’ approach to their investment strategy (Process), the individuals who manage the fund (People), and the asset manager that offers the fund (Parent). These pillar assessments also account for other factors like Price and Performance.

The relative impact of each pillar on the overall rating depends on whether a fund is actively or passively managed. For the many ETFs that are passively managed, the Process Pillar is more important than the People assessment.

The majority of the Gold-rated ETFs, listed below, consist of low-cost, passively managed funds that our analysts believe will tightly track a reasonable index over a long time frame. Many of these ETFs can be core holdings in a portfolio; few niche ETFs receive Gold ratings because they take on too much risk by targeting narrower themes.

Have more questions about ETFs?

Check out Morningstar's Guide to ETF Investing.

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The Best Stock ETFs

Stocks have the highest growth potential among the core asset classes, but they also carry the most risk. Investors with long investing horizons will likely put most, if not all, of their portfolio assets into stocks.

Most of the best stock ETFs are passive, broadly diversified U.S. large-cap stock funds that can fill a core spot in a portfolio. A handful of funds that invest in other domestic equity categories also made the cut. High-quality options that provide foreign stock exposure round out the list.

The Best Large-Cap U.S. Stock ETFs

If you’re looking for a passive core holding, consider starting with a large-cap ETF.

Large companies dominate the stock market; such firms account for over 75% of the U.S. market’s value. In particular, ETFs in the large-blend category are about as “core” as you can get because they include both growth and value stocks.

All but three of the best large-cap U.S. stock ETFs are passive. Morningstar research has shown that most active managers haven’t added much value over their respective benchmark indexes in this part of the market, so low-cost index funds are terrific options here.

The Best Large-Cap U.S. Stock ETFs

Fund Name Ticker Active/Passive Morningstar Category Morningstar Rating Annualized 5-Year Total Return %
Dimensional US Core Equity 2 ETF DFAC Active Large Blend 10.77
Dimensional US Core Equity Market ETF DFAU Active Large Blend
IVV Passive Large Blend 12.48
ITOT Passive Large Blend 11.65
Schwab US Broad Market ETF™ SCHB Passive Large Blend 11.71
Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF™ SCHD Passive Large Value 10.69
Schwab US Large-Cap ETF™ SCHX Passive Large Blend 12.29
SPTM Passive Large Blend 12.20
SPLG Passive Large Blend 12.62
T. Rowe Price Dividend Growth ETF TDVG Active Large Blend
Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF VIG Passive Large Blend 10.86
Vanguard Growth ETF VUG Passive Large Growth 16.07
Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF VYM Passive Large Value 7.75
Vanguard Large-Cap ETF VV Passive Large Blend 12.43
Vanguard Russell 1000 Growth ETF VONG Passive Large Growth 16.28
VOO Passive Large Blend 12.47
VOOG Passive Large Growth 13.20
Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF VTI Passive Large Blend 11.69
Vanguard Value ETF VTV Passive Large Value 8.50

Source: Morningstar Direct, Morningstar analysts. Return data as of November 30, 2023.
The Morningstar Rating shows how a fund’s historical risk-adjusted return compares to its category peers. Funds must have at least three years of performance history to receive a Morningstar Rating.

The Best International Stock ETFs

You can use international stock exposure to counterbalance some of your U.S.-specific risk and round out your portfolio’s core stock allocation.

ETFs in the foreign large-blend category are good candidates to anchor your portfolio while the small/mid-cap and European stock funds can further diversify your foreign stock exposure. And if you want to cover both domestic and international stocks with a single ETF, those in the global large-stock blend category can be excellent options.

The Best International Stock ETFs

Fund Name Ticker Active/ Passive Morningstar Category Morningstar Rating Annualized 5-Year Total Return %
Dimensional International Core Equity Market ETF DFAI Active Foreign Large Blend
Dimensional International Small Cap Value ETF DISV Active Foreign Small/Mid Value
Dimensional International Small Cap ETF DFIS Active Foreign Small/Mid Blend
iShares Core MSCI Total Intl Stk ETF IXUS Passive Foreign Large Blend 5.21
Vanguard FTSE All-Wld ex-US ETF VEU Passive Foreign Large Blend 5.37
Vanguard FTSE All-Wld ex-US SmCp ETF VSS Passive Foreign Small/Mid Blend 4.39
Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF VGK Passive Europe Stock 7.00
Vanguard Intl Div Apprec ETF VIGI Passive Foreign Large Growth 7.59
Vanguard Total Intl Stock ETF VXUS Passive Foreign Large Blend 5.28
Vanguard Total World Stock ETF VT Passive Global Large-Stock Blend 9.06

Source: Morningstar Direct, Morningstar analysts. Return data as of November 30, 2023.
The Morningstar Rating shows how a fund’s historical risk-adjusted return compares to its category peers. Funds must have at least three years of performance history to receive a Morningstar Rating.

The Best Small- and Mid-Cap U.S. Stock ETFs

You can supplement your domestic stock allocation with exposure to domestic small- or mid-cap stocks, but these funds aren’t necessarily a core piece of the portfolio.

Depending on the composition of your large-blend fund, you may have sufficient exposure to these areas already. The real estate ETF that made the list can be a helpful long-term diversifier because of the low correlation between REITs and the stock market.

The Best Small- and Mid-Cap U.S. Stock ETFs

Fund Name Ticker Active/Passive Morningstar Category Morningstar Rating Annualized 5-Year Total Return %
Dimensional US Real Estate ETF DFAR Active Real Estate
Dimensional U.S. Small Cap ETF DFAS Active Small Blend 6.95
SPMD Passive Mid-Cap Blend 7.85
Vanguard Mid-Cap ETF VO Passive Mid-Cap Blend 8.89
Vanguard Mid-Cap Growth ETF VOT Passive Mid-Cap Growth 9.88
Vanguard Mid-Cap Value ETF VOE Passive Mid-Cap Value 7.46
Vanguard Real Estate ETF VNQ Passive Real Estate 3.66
IVOO Passive Mid-Cap Blend 8.02
Vanguard Small-Cap ETF VB Passive Small Blend 6.99
Vanguard Small-Cap Growth ETF VBK Passive Small Growth 5.86
Vanguard Small-Cap Value ETF VBR Passive Small Value 7.14

Source: Morningstar Direct, Morningstar analysts. Return data as of November 30, 2023.
The Morningstar Rating shows how a fund’s historical risk-adjusted return compares to its category peers. Funds must have at least three years of performance history to receive a Morningstar Rating.

The Best Bond ETFs

Bonds can help reduce the risk in your portfolio, which is helpful as your investing timeline gets shorter and your goal shifts from maximizing your potential return to maintaining your accumulated wealth.

Low expenses are an even bigger performance differentiator for safer, low-returning assets like bonds than they are for higher-returning assets like stocks. For that reason, low-cost ETFs can be valuable building blocks in this area.

The Best Intermediate- and Long-Term Bond ETFs

If short-term cash needs aren’t a concern, high-quality intermediate-term bond funds are good options for fixed-income exposure.

If you’re looking to fill a relatively small bond allocation, one ETF in the intermediate core bond category is likely enough. There are also high-quality offerings in the intermediate core-plus bond category if you want to lean into some noncore bond exposure.

If you’re looking to hold bonds in a taxable account, you may want to consider municipal bonds. While Morningstar generally recommends traditional mutual funds for muni exposure, one municipal-bond ETF managed to earn a Gold rating.

The Best Intermediate- and Long-Term Bond ETFs

Fund Name Ticker Active/Passive Morningstar Category Morningstar Rating Annualized 5-Year Total Return %
Fidelity® Total Bond ETF FBND Active Intermediate Core-Plus Bond 1.71
iShares Core Total USD Bond Market ETF IUSB Passive Intermediate Core-Plus Bond 0.98
iShares Core US Aggregate Bond ETF AGG Passive Intermediate Core Bond 0.68
Vanguard Long-Term Corporate Bond ETF VCIT Passive Corporate Bond 2.28
Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF BLV Passive Long-Term Bond 0.34
Vanguard Long-Term Corporate Bond ETF VCLT Passive Long-Term Bond 1.83
Vanguard Tax-Exempt Bond ETF VTEB Passive Muni National Interm 2.01
Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF BND Passive Intermediate Core Bond 0.75

Source: Morningstar Direct, Morningstar analysts. Return data as of November 30, 2023.
The Morningstar Rating shows how a fund’s historical risk-adjusted return compares to its category peers. Funds must have at least three years of performance history to receive a Morningstar Rating.

The Best Short-Term and Inflation-Protected Bond ETFs

While not for everyone, short-term and inflation-protected bond ETFs can provide diversification in a bond-heavy portfolio. You can also use short-term bond funds to help cover your short-term spending.

Funds focused on Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities can be particularly helpful if you want to add some defense against high inflation, but they’re best kept in a tax-sheltered account because of their high tax costs.

The Best Short-Term and Inflation-Protected Bond ETFs

Fund Name Ticker Active/ Passive Morningstar Category Morningstar Rating Annualized 5-Year Total Return %
JPMorgan Limited Duration Bond ETF JPLD Active Short-Term Bond 1.66
PIMCO Enhanced Short Maturity Active ETF MINT Active Ultrashort Bond 1.90
PIMCO Enhanced Short Maturity Active ESG ETF EMNT Active Ultrashort Bond
Schwab Short-Term U.S. Treasury ETF™ SCHO Passive Short Government 1.16
Schwab US TIPS ETF™ SCHP Passive Inflation-Protected Bond 2.66
SPDR® Portfolio Short Term Treasury ETF SPTS Passive Short Government 1.17
T. Rowe Price Floating Rate ETF TFLR Active Bank Loan
Vanguard Short-Term Corporate Bond ETF VCSH Passive Short-Term Bond 2.08
Vanguard Short-Term Infl-Prot Secs ETF VTIP Passive Inflation-Protected Bond 3.15
Vanguard Short-Term Treasury ETF VGSH Passive Short Government 1.17

Source: Morningstar Direct, Morningstar analysts. Return data as of November 30, 2023.
The Morningstar Rating shows how a fund’s historical risk-adjusted return compares to its category peers. Funds must have at least three years of performance history to receive a Morningstar Rating.

More About ETFs

The Best ETFs and How They Fit in Your Portfolio (3)

Morningstar′s Guide to ETF Investing

Learn about the types of exchange-traded funds, their costs, and how to invest in them.

Learn More

The Best ETFs and How They Fit in Your Portfolio (4)

The Best Index Funds

These mutual funds and ETFs earn Morningstar’s top ratings for 2024.

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The Best ETFs and How They Fit in Your Portfolio (5)

The Best and Worst New ETFs of 2023

A record year of new ETF launches brought with it the good, the bad, and the ugly.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Margaret Giles is an editor for Morningstar.

CONTRIBUTORS

Research contributors:Amy Arnott, Bryan Armour, Ryan Jackson
Designers: Nura Husseini-Yoon, Zhan Su
Editors: Susan Dziubinski, Emelia Fredlick

These research authors and research contributors are employees of Morningstar Research Services LLC.

This content is not intended to be individualized investment advice, but rather to illustrate possible factors that can impact financial decisions. Investors should consider this information in the full context of their own financial decisions.

Read our editorial policy to learn more about our process.

The Best ETFs and How They Fit in Your Portfolio (2024)

FAQs

What ETFs should be in your portfolio? ›

10 ETFs to Build a Diversified Portfolio
FundExpense Ratio
iShares Global Energy ETF (IXC)0.44%
abrdn Physical Precious Metals Basket Shares ETF (GLTR)0.60%
Invesco S&P 100 Equal Weight ETF (EQWL)0.25%
SPDR Dow Jones REIT ETF (RWR)0.25%
6 more rows
May 2, 2024

What is the 70 30 ETF strategy? ›

This investment strategy seeks total return through exposure to a diversified portfolio of primarily equity, and to a lesser extent, fixed income asset classes with a target allocation of 70% equities and 30% fixed income. Target allocations can vary +/-5%.

What does a well balanced ETF portfolio look like? ›

Diversification: A well-diversified portfolio should include ETFs that cover different asset classes (stocks, bonds, commodities, etc.), sectors, industries, and geographical regions. This spreads risk and reduces the impact of any single investment on the overall performance.

How much of your portfolio should be in one ETF? ›

Holding too many ETFs in your portfolio introduces inefficiencies that in the long term will have a detrimental impact on the risk/reward profile of your portfolio. For most personal investors, an optimal number of ETFs to hold would be 5 to 10 across asset classes, geographies, and other characteristics.

How many S&P 500 ETFs should I own? ›

SPY, VOO and IVV are among the most popular S&P 500 ETFs. These three S&P 500 ETFs are quite similar, but may sometimes diverge in terms of costs or daily returns. Investors generally only need one S&P 500 ETF.

Is 20 ETFs too many? ›

How many ETFs are enough? The answer depends on several factors when deciding how many ETFs you should own. Generally speaking, fewer than 10 ETFs are likely enough to diversify your portfolio, but this will vary depending on your financial goals, ranging from retirement savings to income generation.

What is the 3 5 10 rule for ETF? ›

Specifically, a fund is prohibited from: acquiring more than 3% of a registered investment company's shares (the “3% Limit”); investing more than 5% of its assets in a single registered investment company (the “5% Limit”); or. investing more than 10% of its assets in registered investment companies (the “10% Limit”).

What is the 30 day rule on ETFs? ›

If you buy substantially identical security within 30 days before or after a sale at a loss, you are subject to the wash sale rule. This prevents you from claiming the loss at this time.

What is the rule of 40 in ETF? ›

What is the Rule of 40? The Rule of 40 states that, at scale, the combined value of revenue growth rate and profit margin should exceed 40% for healthy SaaS companies. The Rule of 40 – popularized by Brad Feld – states that an SaaS company's revenue growth rate plus profit margin should be equal to or exceed 40%.

Is it better to invest in one ETF or multiple? ›

The majority of individual investors should, however, seek to hold 5 to 10 ETFs that are diverse in terms of asset classes, regions, and other factors. Investors can diversify their investment portfolio across several industries and asset classes while maintaining simplicity by buying 5 to 10 ETFs.

What is the most stable ETF? ›

7 Best Long-Term ETFs to Buy and Hold
ETFAssets Under Management10-Year Annualized Return
iShares Core S&P Mid-Cap ETF (IJH)$85 billion9.9%
Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ)$259 billion18.6%
Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (VYM)$55 billion10.1%
Vanguard Total International Stock ETF (VXUS)$69 billion4.5%
3 more rows
Apr 24, 2024

What is a good 3 ETF portfolio? ›

One option for a solid three-ETF portfolio could be to include the Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD), the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO), and the Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ). The SCHD ETF focuses on high-quality dividend stocks, which can provide stable income and potential long-term growth.

What is the 4% rule for ETF? ›

It's relatively simple: You add up all of your investments, and withdraw 4% of that total during your first year of retirement. In subsequent years, you adjust the dollar amount you withdraw to account for inflation.

What is the best ETF portfolio? ›

  • The Best Balanced ETFs of May 2024.
  • iShares Core Aggressive Allocation ETF (AOA)
  • Cambria Global Asset Allocation ETF (GAA)
  • SPDR SSGA Multi-Asset Real Return ETF (RLY)
  • iShares Core Moderate Allocation ETF (AOM)
  • WisdomTree U.S. Efficient Core Fund (NTSX)
  • iShares Core Growth Allocation ETF (AOR)
7 days ago

How long should you hold ETFs? ›

Holding an ETF for longer than a year may get you a more favorable capital gains tax rate when you sell your investment.

How do you structure an ETF portfolio? ›

The steps to build an ETF portfolio are to:
  1. Define investment goals.
  2. Assess risk tolerance.
  3. Determine the asset mix.
  4. Choose an ETF portfolio structure.
  5. Research and analyze ETFs.
  6. Select ETFs for the portfolio.
  7. Choose an entry strategy to buy ETFs.

What is a well diversified ETF? ›

Diversified Portfolios ETFs offer investors exposure to multiple asset classes through a single ticker. These funds vary in investment objectives and risk/return profiles, but typically invest in a mix of equities and fixed income securities.

How do I know what ETFs to invest in? ›

Before purchasing an ETF there are five factors to take into account 1) performance of the ETF 2) the underlying index of the ETF 3) the ETF's structure 4) when and how to trade the ETF and 5) the total cost of the ETF.

Which ETF has the best 10 year return? ›

Top 10 ETFs by 10-year Performance
TickerFund10-Yr Return
VGTVanguard Information Technology ETF19.60%
IYWiShares U.S. Technology ETF19.58%
IXNiShares Global Tech ETF18.20%
IGMiShares Expanded Tech Sector ETF17.95%
6 more rows

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