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Reviewed: May 26, 2026Verified against official sources

The Best ETFs in Canada (2026): A Practical Picking Guide

How to actually pick a Canadian ETF — the framework, plus our 2026 picks for core portfolios, all-in-one funds, and dividend strategies. Reviewed quarterly.

Updated · May 26, 2026
Quang Huynh, Founder & EditorPublished May 25, 20265 min readEditorial standards

Wooden tiles spelling ETF growth on a wooden surface, symbolizing investment strategy.
In this article
  1. The 5-question framework for picking any ETF
  2. If you want one ETF and you're done: all-in-one (asset allocation)
  3. If you want to build it yourself: the core 3-ETF portfolio
  4. If you want dividends: Canadian dividend ETFs
  5. The mistakes to avoid
  6. Frequently asked questions

The “best ETF” depends entirely on what role you want it to play in your portfolio. A 22-year-old with a 40-year horizon needs a different ETF than a 62-year-old who needs income next year. This guide gives you a framework for picking yours — plus our actual 2026 recommendations in each category.

Updated quarterly. Last review: May 2026. Rates and MERs change; we keep this current.

The 5-question framework for picking any ETF

  1. MER (Management Expense Ratio) — the annual fee. For Canadian index ETFs, anything over 0.30% is too expensive. The best are at 0.04-0.20%. Over 30 years, a 0.50% higher MER costs you roughly 15% of your final balance.
  2. AUM (Assets Under Management) — total money in the fund. Stick to ETFs with $500M+ in AUM. Smaller funds can shut down, forcing you to sell at a bad time.
  3. Distribution frequency — monthly, quarterly, or annual. Monthly is convenient for retirees drawing income; less relevant for growth investors who reinvest.
  4. Currency hedging — for US/international ETFs, “hedged” means you don’t take a hit if the CAD strengthens. “Unhedged” means you might gain or lose 5-15% from FX moves on top of stock returns. Both are valid; pick deliberately.
  5. Tracking error — how closely the ETF actually matches its underlying index. Big providers (Vanguard, BlackRock/iShares, BMO) have tracking errors under 0.10%. Smaller, exotic ETFs can have 0.5-1%+.

If you want one ETF and you’re done: all-in-one (asset allocation)

For 80% of Canadian investors, an all-in-one ETF is the right answer. You buy one fund, it holds a globally diversified mix of stocks and bonds, and it rebalances automatically. No DIY rebalancing, no analysis paralysis.

TickerAllocationMERBest for
VEQT100% stocks0.24%20-50 year horizon, no bonds
XEQT100% stocks0.20%VEQT alternative (cheaper)
VGRO / XGRO80% stocks / 20% bonds0.24%15-20 year horizon, mild risk-averse
VBAL / XBAL60% stocks / 40% bonds0.24%10-15 year horizon, balanced
VCNS / XCNS40% stocks / 60% bonds0.24%5-10 years, near retirement

If you want to build it yourself: the core 3-ETF portfolio

Slightly lower MER than all-in-ones (~0.10% vs 0.24%) and full control over your stock/bond split. The trade-off is you have to manually rebalance once or twice a year.

  • Canadian equity: VCN (0.05% MER) or XIC (0.06%) — tracks the S&P/TSX Composite, ~240 Canadian companies
  • US equity: VFV (0.09%) or ZSP (0.09%) — tracks the S&P 500 unhedged. Hedged versions: VSP, ZSP.U
  • International equity: XEF (0.22%) — developed markets ex-North America. XEC (0.27%) for emerging markets
  • Bonds (if you want them): ZAG (0.09%) or VAB (0.09%) — Canadian aggregate bonds

A common allocation for a 30-year-old: 30% VCN + 40% VFV + 20% XEF + 10% XEC. Add bonds (10-20%) when you’re within 15 years of retirement.

If you want dividends: Canadian dividend ETFs

  • VDY (0.20% MER) — Canadian high-dividend yield, ~30 holdings, 4-5% yield
  • XEI (0.22%) — broader Canadian dividend, ~75 holdings, similar yield
  • CDZ (0.66%) — Canadian dividend aristocrats (5+ years of increases). Higher MER but better quality screen

Note: Canadian dividend ETFs concentrate in banks + utilities + telecoms (the “BUT” trinity). Great for income, but you’re under-diversified vs a total-market index.

The mistakes to avoid

  • Buying themed/sector ETFs because they’re hot. Cannabis ETFs in 2018, ARK ETFs in 2021, “AI” ETFs now — these all underperform broad indexes after the hype fades.
  • Stacking overlapping ETFs. Holding VEQT + VFV + VCN means you’re 50% overweight US large-cap and 25% overweight Canadian. Pick one approach.
  • Chasing high yields. An 8%-yield ETF is usually a covered-call fund (BMO ZWB, etc.) that caps your upside and bleeds slowly in flat markets. Fine as a small allocation; not a core holding.
  • Trading frequently. The whole point of index ETFs is buy and hold. Every trade is a tax event in non-registered accounts.

Frequently asked questions

Should I hold ETFs in my TFSA, RRSP, or non-registered account?

For most Canadians, fill the TFSA first (2026 contribution room is $7,000, lifetime room is $102,000 if you were 18 in 2009). Canadian and international ETFs work well there. US-listed ETFs holding US stocks are slightly better in an RRSP because the IRS doesn’t withhold the 15% dividend tax on RRSP holdings — but for Canadian-listed ETFs like VFV that hold US stocks, you pay the withholding either way.

Non-registered accounts come last, and that’s where Canadian-eligible-dividend ETFs (VDY, XEI) actually shine because of the dividend tax credit.

Is VEQT or XEQT better in 2026?

They’re functionally the same product. XEQT is 0.20% MER vs VEQT’s 0.24%, holds slightly more US exposure (~47% vs ~44%), and has fewer Canadian stocks. On a $50,000 holding, the MER difference is $20/year — not life-changing. Pick one and stop comparing; the bigger risk is switching between them and triggering capital gains in a non-registered account.

What’s the minimum amount where buying individual ETFs makes more sense than a robo-advisor?

Roughly $15,000–$25,000, depending on the platform. Wealthsimple Trade and Questrade both offer free ETF purchases, so the only friction is doing your own rebalancing once or twice a year. Below that, a robo like Wealthsimple Invest (0.40–0.50% fee on top of ETF MERs) is fine — the dollar cost is small and the automation matters more than the fee drag.

When my mom asked me where to put her TFSA money after she sold her rental, I just put her in XBAL. She’s not going to log in and rebalance, and the 0.24% MER buys her never having to think about it.

Should I currency-hedge my US ETF exposure?

For a long horizon (15+ years), unhedged is the standard recommendation — currency moves average out, and hedging costs about 0.10–0.20% per year in implicit fees. VFV (unhedged) is the default. If you’re within 5 years of needing the money or you specifically don’t want CAD/USD volatility on top of stock volatility, the hedged versions (VSP, XSP) are reasonable. Don’t split 50/50 — that’s just hedging confusion, not hedging strategy.

What about covered-call ETFs like ZWB or HMAX for income?

They pay 7–10% distributions, which looks great until you realize the capital is barely growing. Over the last decade, ZWB has returned roughly 6–7% annually vs about 9–10% for a plain Canadian bank index. They’re a tool for retirees who genuinely need the monthly cash flow and don’t mind capping upside — not a wealth-building vehicle. Keep them under 10–15% of a portfolio if you use them at all.

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Written by

Quang Huynh

Founder & editor, Landed Money

Born and raised in Canada to Vietnamese-Chinese immigrant parents. Not a licensed advisor. I write money guides for any Canadian household that needs one — the kind I wish my parents had.

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