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ETFs vs Mutual Funds: The Tax Drag Nobody Talks About

ETFs vs Mutual Funds in 2026: The Tax Number That Should Make You Switch

ETFs vs mutual funds tax drag comparison illustration

ETFs vs Mutual Funds in 2026: The Tax Number That Should Make You Switch

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Key PointsAbout This Summary iAn AI tool helped create this summary based on the text of the article. The Luna3 team has checked it for accuracy and revised as necessary. Read more about how we use AI in our publishing process.
  • In 2025, 72% of US equity mutual funds distributed capital gains to investors — even those who never sold a single share. ETFs almost never do this.
  • Active ETFs are growing fast: AUM grew from $140B to over $1.6 trillion in roughly two years, and active ETFs captured ~90% of March 2026 net ETF inflows. They average 37 basis points cheaper than equivalent active mutual funds.
  • The decision is simpler than most guides admit: ETFs win in taxable brokerage accounts on tax efficiency; mutual funds still make sense inside 401(k)s where structure is moot and the lowest-cost index option wins.

Most ETFs vs mutual funds explainers skip the one number that actually decides it. Here it is: in 2025, 72% of US equity mutual funds distributed capital gains to shareholders — even those who never sold a single share, according to Morningstar. Investors got a Form 1099-DIV in the mail, owed taxes, and had nothing to show for it. ETFs almost never do this — Morningstar’s parallel data set says only about 6% of ETFs issued capital gains distributions in the same year.

That’s the gap. Below, we walk through why the old “ETF equals passive, mutual fund equals active” mental model broke in 2026, what the actual dollar math looks like on a real taxable account, and where mutual funds still make sense — usually one specific place.

The old mental model is broken

For roughly fifteen years the shorthand was clean: ETFs were the low-cost passive wrappers tracking an index; mutual funds were where active managers lived. Pick your wrapper based on what you wanted from the underlying strategy. That stopped being true around 2024.

Active ETF assets under management grew from $140 billion to over $1.6 trillion as of February 28, 2026 — roughly 11x in two years (Morningstar). The number of active ETFs surpassed passive ETFs in mid-2025. And in March 2026, active ETFs alone pulled in roughly $78 billion in March 2026 — about 90% of total ETF flows for the month, per ETFGI data cited by etf.com.

The capital is following a structural cost advantage. Active ETFs are on average 37 basis points cheaper than equivalent active mutual funds, per Morningstar research — the equal-weighted average expense ratio is 0.63% for active ETFs versus 1.02% for active mutual funds. On a $100,000 position, that’s roughly $390 per year, before compounding. Run that for 20 years on a portfolio that’s actually growing and the wrapper choice is a five-figure decision.

Here’s how the four combinations stack up in 2026:

WrapperStrategyAvg expense ratioExamples
ETFPassive index0.03–0.10%VOO (0.03%), VTI (0.03%), SCHB (0.03%)
Mutual fundPassive index0.015–0.10%VFIAX (0.04%), FXAIX (0.015%)
ETFActive0.63% avgGrowing fastest category — JEPI, COWZ, ARK suite
Mutual fundActive1.02% avgShrinking — legacy distribution channels
Data: Morningstar 2026 fund-fee research · As of Feb 28, 2026

The wrapper used to track the strategy. Now both wrappers can deliver both strategies — but the ETF wrapper does it cheaper, with better tax treatment, and intraday liquidity. The reason to ever choose a mutual fund in 2026 has gotten narrow, and the active ETF rise is the load-bearing reason why.

The tax drag — the number that actually decides ETFs vs mutual funds

This is the section most generic guides skip. Mutual funds are required to distribute their realized capital gains to all shareholders each year. ETFs almost never do. The reason is a structural quirk of how ETFs are bought and sold by institutions, called “in-kind creation and redemption.”

When a mutual fund needs to raise cash — because shareholders are redeeming, or because the manager is rebalancing — it sells the underlying stocks. Selling realizes capital gains. By law, those gains have to be distributed to current shareholders by year-end. So even if you bought VFIAX in January and held it through December, you can receive a capital gains distribution in late December that’s taxed as your income that year.

When an ETF needs to handle the same flows, it uses in-kind exchanges with authorized participants — large institutional intermediaries swap a basket of underlying stocks for ETF shares, or vice versa. No stocks are actually sold inside the fund during this exchange, so no capital gain is realized, so no distribution is forced. The ETF effectively rebalances silently. The SEC’s investor guide to ETFs walks through this in detail.

The 2022 example is the cleanest illustration. The S&P 500 fell more than 18% that year. You’d expect mutual fund holders to be looking at unrealized losses, not gains. Yet two-thirds of US equity mutual funds still issued capital gains distributions — averaging about 7% of NAV — to their shareholders that year. Investors lost money on paper AND got a tax bill. ETF holders of equivalent index strategies got nothing.

The dollar math on a typical taxable account, assuming a 0.5% average annual capital gains distribution (conservative — many active mutual funds run higher), 8% annual growth, and the top federal rate of 23.8% (20% long-term capital gains plus 3.8% net investment income tax):

YearAccount valueDistribution at 0.5%Tax at 23.8%Cumulative tax drag
Year 1$100,000$500$119$119
Year 5$135,500$678$161~$760
Year 10$199,000$995$237~$1,860
Year 20$396,400$1,982$472~$5,800
Illustrative math · Assumes 0.5% annual cap gains distribution, 8% growth, top federal LTCG rate (20% + 3.8% NIIT per IRS Publication 550)

Roughly $5,800 of pure tax drag on $100K over 20 years, just from the wrapper choice — and that’s before re-investment opportunity cost on the taxes paid. The number scales linearly with account size: at $500,000, the same math runs to roughly $29,000. None of that drag exists in an ETF wrapper tracking the same index.

The 2026 product comparison — VOO vs VFIAX

Two flagship products that track the same index — the S&P 500 — illustrate why the wrapper choice matters even when the underlying strategy is identical:

FeatureVOO (ETF)VFIAX (Mutual Fund)
Expense ratio0.03%0.04%
Minimum investment$1 (one share, fractional at most brokers)$3,000
TradingIntraday on exchangeOnce daily at NAV close
Tax efficiency (2025)No capital gains distribution~7% of NAV distributed
Fractional sharesBroker-dependent (Fidelity, Schwab, Robinhood yes)Built-in
Bid-ask spread~1 cent at peak liquidityNone (priced at NAV)
Auto-invest exact dollarsBroker-dependentStandard feature
Source: Vanguard investor pages + SEC Form 497K filings · As of May 2026

Both funds own identical baskets — the same 500 stocks weighted by market cap. Pre-tax performance over any window will be within a few basis points. After tax in a taxable account, VOO wins by roughly 12 basis points per year on the tax-drag math above. Over 20 years, that’s the difference between $466,000 and $480,000 on a $100K starting balance. The wrapper isn’t a rounding error.

Where mutual funds still make sense

There’s exactly one place mutual funds clearly win in 2026, plus one or two carve-outs.

401(k) and 403(b) plans where ETFs aren’t on the menu. Many employer retirement plans were built around mutual fund infrastructure and haven’t added ETF coverage. If your plan offers VFIAX but no VOO, you take VFIAX — the structure is irrelevant inside a 401(k) because gains aren’t taxed until withdrawal anyway. The entire tax-drag math collapses to zero inside a tax-deferred account.

Auto-invest with exact dollar amounts. Mutual funds handle fractional shares natively. You contribute $250 a month, the fund gives you 1.872 shares and a fractional remainder, end of story. ETF fractional shares depend on the broker — Fidelity, Schwab, and Robinhood support them; many smaller brokers don’t. If your broker doesn’t and you want a strict-dollar dollar-cost-averaging schedule, an index mutual fund is more friction-free.

Institutional share classes inside large 401(k)s. Some institutional mutual fund share classes — FXAIX at 0.015%, the institutional Vanguard classes — have lower expense ratios than the equivalent ETFs. Tax inefficiency still applies, but inside a 401(k) it doesn’t matter. If your plan offers a low-cost institutional share class, that’s often the best wrapper inside that account.

Nothing else. The old reasons to choose mutual funds in a taxable account — “active management isn’t available in ETF form” — have basically evaporated, which is the next point.

The active ETF opportunity is closing the last gap

The most under-discussed shift in 2026: active management lives almost entirely in ETF form for new launches. Ark, Dimensional, T. Rowe Price, JPMorgan, Capital Group, and TCW have all rolled out active ETFs over the past two years. Several active mutual funds have converted directly to ETF structure. Per ETFdb, the number of active mutual funds owning at least one ETF inside the fund more than doubled in the year through April 2026 — even mutual fund managers are now buying ETFs to express their views.

The practical question for an investor in 2026: if you want active management in a taxable account, the active ETF version is almost always the better wrapper. Lower expense ratio. Better tax treatment. Often the same portfolio manager and strategy. The friction to migrate is small — match the ticker, sell the mutual fund, buy the ETF — though watch for embedded capital gains in the mutual fund position before you sell. A long-held VFIAX position with 80% unrealized gain isn’t worth liquidating in a single year just to switch to VOO; harvest gradually or wait for a down-market window.

The decision framework

The decision tree is shorter than most guides make it. Work top-down — the account type decides the wrapper, not the other way around:

Account type → wrapper choice
  • Taxable brokerageETF wins. Tax efficiency, lower ER, intraday liquidity. No reason to choose a mutual fund here unless your broker is unusually limited.
  • 401(k) / 403(b) — no ETF optionMutual fund by necessity. Pick the lowest-ER index option you have. Tax inefficiency is moot inside the wrapper.
  • 401(k) / 403(b) — with ETF optionUsually ETF. Check expense ratios first — institutional mutual fund share classes can be cheaper. If costs are equal, ETF wins on liquidity.
  • Roth IRAETF wins. Tax advantage is already built into the account; the ETF’s tax efficiency is a bonus rather than load-bearing. ETFs also let you DCA in smaller increments at most brokers.
  • HSA, 529, custodial accountsSame logic as Roth. Tax-advantaged or tax-free wrapper covers most of the tax angle; pick the lower-cost vehicle.

That’s it. The wrapper question is downstream of the account-type question, and most generic guides have the order backwards. Decide where the money is going first; the ETFs vs mutual funds answer falls out of that.

What to read next

If this was your first dive into the wrapper question, our explainer on what an ETF actually is walks through the structure from first principles. The follow-on cost question — how a 25-basis-point difference compounds over 20 years — is in ETF expense ratios. And for the tax-sheltered side of the decision, Roth vs Traditional IRA covers the account-type question that sits upstream of every wrapper choice.

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