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VCN Review: Vanguard FTSE Canada All Cap Index ETF in 2026

Updated

If you want the broader shortlist before choosing a Canada-only equity ETF, start with best ETFs in Canada.

VCN Overview

FeatureDetails
Full nameVanguard FTSE Canada All Cap Index ETF
TickerVCN
ExchangeTSX
MER0.05%
Inception dateAugust 2013
Distribution frequencyQuarterly
Distribution yield~2.8–3.2%
Number of holdings180+
Index trackedFTSE Canada All Cap Domestic Index
AUM$6B+
Eligible for TFSA/RRSPYes

Top 10 Holdings

HoldingSectorApproximate Weight
Royal Bank of CanadaFinancials~7%
Toronto-Dominion BankFinancials~6%
ShopifyTechnology~5%
Canadian Natural ResourcesEnergy~4%
EnbridgeEnergy~4%
Bank of Nova ScotiaFinancials~3%
Canadian Pacific Kansas CityIndustrials~3%
Brookfield Asset ManagementFinancials~3%
Bank of MontrealFinancials~3%
Canadian National RailwayIndustrials~3%

Sector Allocation

SectorWeight
Financials~35%
Energy~17%
Industrials~12%
Materials~10%
Technology~8%
Communication Services~5%
Utilities~4%
Consumer Staples~4%
Consumer Discretionary~3%
Real Estate~2%

Performance History

PeriodVCN Total ReturnAnnualized
1 year~18%18%
3 years~25%~8%
5 years~50%~8.5%
10 years~100%~7%
Since inception (2013)~130%+~7.5%

Returns include reinvested distributions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

VCN vs Other Canadian Equity ETFs

ETFMERHoldingsIndexYieldAUM
VCN0.05%180+FTSE Canada All Cap~3.0%$6B+
XIC0.06%230+S&P/TSX Capped Composite~3.0%$12B+
ZCN0.06%250+S&P/TSX Capped Composite~3.0%$8B+
HXT0.03%60S&P/TSX 60 (total return swap)~0% (synthetic)$3B+
XIU0.18%60S&P/TSX 60~3.0%$12B+

VCN vs XIC: Detailed Comparison

FeatureVCNXIC
MER0.05%0.06%
Holdings180+230+
Small-cap exposureYes (all-cap)Yes (composite)
Tracking errorVery lowVery low
Distribution frequencyQuarterlyQuarterly
Yield~3.0%~3.0%
ProviderVanguard CanadaBlackRock (iShares)
AUM$6B+$12B+
VerdictSlightly cheaper; slightly fewer holdingsMore liquid; slightly more diversified

Both are excellent — choose whichever your brokerage makes easiest to buy.

If you are building the classic Canadian sleeve inside a broader portfolio, pair this decision with best all-in-one ETFs in Canada and asset allocation by age.

Role in a Portfolio

Portfolio StrategyVCN AllocationPaired With
All-in-one Canadian100%N/A (concentrated)
Canadian + international25–30%XEQT/VEQT or XAW (international)
Classic 3-fund25–30%XAW (international) + ZAG (bonds)
Income-focused20%XDIV/VDY (dividends) + ZAG (bonds)
Growth-focused20–25%XAW (international) + QQC (Nasdaq)

If you are tilting toward income instead of pure market-cap exposure, compare VDY review and XEI review.

VCN pros and cons

Pros:

  • Lowest MER of any Canadian equity ETF (0.05%) — cheaper than XIC (0.06%) or ZCN (0.06%)
  • Includes small-cap Canadian stocks (unlike XIU which only holds 60 large-cap companies)
  • Holds 180+ companies — broader than most alternatives
  • High dividend yield (~2.8–3.2%) from Canadian banks and energy companies
  • All distributions are eligible Canadian dividends — qualify for the dividend tax credit in non-registered accounts

Cons:

  • Canada represents only 3% of global markets — VCN alone is highly concentrated geographically
  • Financials + Energy = ~52% of the portfolio — significant sector concentration
  • No international diversification
  • Canadian market has historically underperformed the US S&P 500

Best for: Investors building a 3-fund Canadian portfolio who want the lowest-cost Canadian equity sleeve alongside XAW (international) and ZAG (bonds). Not ideal as a standalone holding.

Frequently asked questions

Is VCN or XIC better? VCN (0.05% MER) is slightly cheaper than XIC (0.06%) and holds more stocks (~180 vs ~230 via the composite, though XIU only holds 60). For practical purposes, they are nearly identical — choose VCN for the marginal MER advantage if you are at Questrade or IBKR. At Wealthsimple, either works.

Does VCN pay dividends? Yes. VCN pays quarterly distributions, currently yielding approximately 2.8–3.2%. The distributions are primarily eligible Canadian dividends, which benefit from the dividend tax credit when held in a non-registered account.