What Is An ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund)?
An ETF is an investment fund that trades on stock exchanges just like individual stocks. You can buy or sell ETF shares all day long while the market is open.
Most ETFs track market indices like the S&P 500, the total U.S. stock market, or specific sectors like technology or healthcare. You can buy a single share for whatever it costs (often $50 to $300 depending on the fund), and many brokers now offer fractional shares, so you can invest with even less.
ETFs are also champions of tax efficiency! The ETF fund itself does not have to sell its underlying stocks (like the S&P 500 companies it holds) to give you cash. The cash comes from the new buyer in a process called "in-kind redemption". This is the entire secret: The ETF fund rarely sells its holdings for cash. It avoids creating the kind of taxable profit that gets passed on as a surprise tax bill to everyone else.
ETFs have absolutely exploded in popularity.
U.S. ETF assets under management rose to a record $13.46 trillion by the end of 2025, up 30% from 2024. Globally, ETF assets hit $19.5 trillion with record net inflows of $2.1 trillion in a single year. Active ETFs alone grew 65% to reach $1.9 trillion. That kind of rapid growth tells you everything you need to know: investors have figured out that ETFs offer a powerful combination of low costs, tax efficiency, and flexibility.
What Is A Mutual Fund?
A mutual fund is a professionally managed investment pool where thousands of investors contribute money, and a fund manager uses that combined capital to buy stocks, bonds, or other securities according to the fund's stated strategy.
The big difference from ETFs: mutual funds trade only once per day, after the market closes. The fund company calculates the total value of all the fund's holdings divided by the number of shares outstanding. Everyone who places an order that day gets that closing price.
Mutual funds typically require minimum investments, often between $500 and $3,000. You buy and sell shares directly with the fund company, not on a stock exchange.
Mutual funds can be actively managed (where a professional tries to beat the market by picking winning stocks) or passively managed (where the fund simply tracks an index). The actively managed ones charge higher fees.
What Is An Index Fund?
Here's where it gets interesting: index funds aren't actually a separate category of investment. They're a management style that can be packaged as either an ETF or a mutual fund.
An index fund passively tracks a market index like the S&P 500, the total U.S. stock market, or international markets. Instead of paying a fund manager to actively pick stocks they think will outperform, index funds simply buy all (or a representative sample) of the securities in their target index. The goal isn't to beat the market. It's to match the market at the lowest possible cost.
Think of the Index Fund strategy as a powerful, efficient engine. That engine is the star, built for long-term performance. You can buy this winning engine packaged in two different vehicles (ETFs or Mutual Funds). Both vehicles have the exact same engine (the S&P 500 stocks) and will take you to the same destination with virtually the same speed.
The only differences are in the driver experience (trading flexibility) and tiny differences in costs and tax efficiency. The engine is the strategy; the vehicle is just the package.