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Best ETFs for Canadian Investors in 2026

Updated

An ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund) is a basket of securities — stocks, bonds, or both — that trades on a stock exchange like a single share. When you buy one unit of XEQT, you instantly own a tiny piece of over 9,000 companies across North America, Europe, Asia, and emerging markets. That is diversification that would take decades and thousands of individual trades to replicate on your own.

For most Canadian investors, ETFs have replaced mutual funds as the default choice for long-term investing. The reason is cost: the typical Canadian mutual fund charges a management expense ratio (MER) of 1.5–2.5% per year, while broad-market ETFs charge 0.07–0.25%. On a $200,000 portfolio held for 25 years, that fee difference compounds into a difference of over $200,000 in final wealth. The investment vehicle itself is not the point — the fees are.

This guide covers the best ETFs for Canadian investors in 2026 across the most common categories: all-in-one portfolios, dividend income, bonds, and US or international exposure. For a deeper explanation of how ETFs work before reading on, see our Canadian ETF guide and ETF vs mutual fund comparison.

What Makes a Good ETF? Key Criteria

Before choosing an ETF, it helps to know what to look for. Four factors matter most:

MER (Management Expense Ratio): The annual fee deducted from the fund. Lower is almost always better for passive index ETFs. A 0.20% MER on $100,000 costs $200 per year; a 2.0% mutual fund MER costs $2,000 on the same balance.

Assets under management (AUM): Larger funds are more liquid and less likely to be wound down. Any ETF with more than $100 million in AUM is generally stable. The ETFs listed here all have well over $1 billion in AUM.

Tracking error: How closely the ETF follows its target index. Most major Canadian ETFs track their benchmarks very tightly. This is rarely an issue with iShares, Vanguard, or BMO products.

Number of holdings: More holdings generally means better diversification. A 9,000-stock ETF is far less exposed to single-company risk than a 30-stock ETF.

Best All-in-One ETFs in Canada

All-in-one ETFs (sometimes called asset allocation ETFs) are the simplest investing solution available to Canadians. Each fund holds a globally diversified mix of stocks and bonds in a pre-set ratio, rebalances automatically, and charges a single low MER. You buy one ETF and you are done — no need to rebalance, no need to pick sectors, no need to monitor individual holdings.

The choice between an iShares (BlackRock) product and a Vanguard product comes down mainly to personal preference. Both are institutional-quality fund managers with decades of track record. The MER difference of 0.04% is roughly $40 per year on $100,000 — not a meaningful factor in your decision.

ETFAllocationMERHoldingsBest For
XEQT100% equity0.20%9,000+ stocksLong-term growth (10+ year horizon)
VEQT100% equity0.24%13,000+ stocksLong-term growth (Vanguard preference)
XGRO80% equity / 20% bonds0.20%9,000+ stocks + bondsGrowth with some stability
VGRO80% equity / 20% bonds0.24%13,000+ stocks + bondsGrowth with some stability
XBAL60% equity / 40% bonds0.20%9,000+ stocks + bondsBalanced / moderate risk
VBAL60% equity / 40% bonds0.24%13,000+ stocks + bondsBalanced / moderate risk
XCNS40% equity / 60% bonds0.20%Stocks + bondsConservative / near retirement
VCNS40% equity / 60% bonds0.24%Stocks + bondsConservative / near retirement

Choosing the right all-in-one ETF

The right equity-bond split depends on your time horizon and your ability to tolerate watching your portfolio fall without selling:

  • 10+ years to invest: XEQT or VEQT (100% equity for maximum long-run growth)
  • 5–10 years: XGRO or VGRO (80% equity softens volatility somewhat)
  • 3–5 years: XBAL or VBAL (balanced approach reduces downside)
  • Under 3 years: Consider a GIC or high-interest savings account instead — short timeframes expose you to market timing risk

For a full breakdown of each fund including historical performance, see our best all-in-one ETFs guide or read our dedicated XEQT review and VEQT review.

Best Canadian Dividend ETFs

Dividend ETFs focus on stocks that pay regular cash distributions, making them popular among retirees and income-focused investors who want their portfolio to generate spending money. The trade-off is concentration: Canadian dividend ETFs are heavily weighted toward banks and pipelines, which means less diversification than a total-market ETF.

For investors who are still in the accumulation phase — saving for retirement rather than living off investments — a total-return ETF like XEQT typically produces better long-run wealth than a dividend-focused strategy, because dividend-paying stocks do not inherently outperform the broader market.

ETFFocusMERYieldHoldings
VDYCanadian high dividend0.22%~4.2%60+ stocks
XDVCanadian dividend large-cap0.55%~4.0%30 stocks
CDZCanadian Dividend Aristocrats0.66%~3.8%80+ stocks
PDCCanadian Dividend Premium0.67%~5.0%25+ stocks

VDY stands out for its low MER of 0.22% relative to the other dividend ETFs in this category. XDV, CDZ, and PDC all have MERs above 0.50%, which is a meaningful long-term drag. For deeper analysis of dividend strategies, see our best dividend ETFs Canada guide.

Best Bond ETFs in Canada

Bond ETFs hold government and corporate debt securities and pay regular interest income. They serve two purposes in a portfolio: reducing volatility (bonds typically fall less than stocks in downturns) and providing income. If you are using an all-in-one ETF like XEQT or VGRO, bonds are already included — you do not need to add a separate bond ETF.

Bond ETFs are most useful for investors building a custom portfolio, managing a RRIF where regular withdrawals require a stable income component, or reducing portfolio risk as they approach retirement.

ETFFocusMERApproximate YieldDuration
ZAGCanadian aggregate bond0.09%~3.5%Medium
XBBCanadian broad bond0.10%~3.5%Medium
ZSTShort-term corporate bonds0.11%~4.0%Short
ZSDBShort duration high yield0.40%~5.5%Short

ZAG and XBB are the two largest and most-used Canadian bond ETFs. Both track the broad Canadian investment-grade bond market and have nearly identical MERs. Short-duration bond ETFs like ZST are less sensitive to interest rate changes, making them lower-risk in environments where rates might rise. See our best bond ETFs Canada guide for a full comparison.

Best US and International ETFs

These ETFs are useful when building a custom multi-ETF portfolio with specific regional tilts, or when you want direct US market exposure in an RRSP (where US-listed ETFs eliminate withholding tax on dividends — see withholding tax on US ETFs in Canada for the full explanation). For most investors using an all-in-one ETF, these regions are already included and you do not need to add separate funds.

ETFFocusMERHoldings
XUUTotal US market (CAD)0.07%3,500+ US stocks
VUNTotal US market (CAD)0.17%4,000+ US stocks
XEFInternational developed markets (CAD)0.22%2,800+ stocks
XECEmerging markets (CAD)0.25%800+ stocks

XUU is one of the cheapest ETFs available to Canadian investors at 0.07% MER. It tracks the total US market (not just the S&P 500) and is listed in Canadian dollars, avoiding the need to convert currency. For Canadian investors who want pure S&P 500 exposure, see our best S&P 500 ETFs in Canada guide.

Best ETFs by Registered Account Type

The account you hold an ETF in affects its after-tax returns, particularly for ETFs that pay US dividends. Here is the general guidance:

AccountBest ETF TypeReason
TFSAAll-in-one ETF (XEQT/VEQT)All growth and income sheltered from tax
RRSPUS-listed ETFs (VTI, VOO) or all-in-oneRRSP eliminates 15% US withholding tax on US dividends
FHSAAll-in-one ETF (XEQT/XGRO)Maximize growth for first home purchase
Non-registeredCanadian-listed ETFsSimpler tax reporting; foreign dividends taxed as income

In a TFSA, all capital gains and dividends accumulate tax-free, making it the ideal account for high-growth equity ETFs. The RRSP has a treaty-based exemption from the 15% US withholding tax on dividends, which is why holding US-listed ETFs like VFV or VTI in an RRSP rather than a TFSA can be beneficial for investors with large balances. For a full breakdown, see best account type for US stocks in Canada.

The Cost of Fees Over Time

The MER is deducted automatically from the ETF’s returns — you never see a fee statement or invoice. This invisibility makes it easy to underestimate how much it costs over a 20–30 year horizon. Use our MER fee calculator to run your own numbers.

MERAnnual Cost on $100,00030-Year Cost (vs 0.2% ETF)
0.07% (XUU)$70
0.20% (XEQT)$200
0.24% (VEQT)$240+$15,000 vs XEQT
1.00% (some ETFs)$1,000+$190,000 vs XEQT
2.00% (typical mutual fund)$2,000+$341,000 vs XEQT

Switching from a 2% mutual fund to a 0.20% ETF does not require you to pick stocks, time the market, or understand complex financial products. It is a purely administrative decision that can add hundreds of thousands of dollars to your retirement balance.

How to Buy ETFs in Canada

  1. Open a brokerage account — Wealthsimple, Questrade, or your bank’s discount brokerage are the main options
  2. Fund the account with a deposit (transfer from your chequing account)
  3. Search for the ETF by its ticker symbol (e.g., XEQT, VEQT)
  4. Place a market or limit buy order
  5. Hold — do not check the price daily

Most Canadian brokerages charge $0 commission on ETF purchases. Wealthsimple charges nothing; Questrade charges nothing on ETF buys but charges $4.95–$9.95 on sells. For a full step-by-step walkthrough, see how to buy ETFs in Canada and how to start investing in Canada.