An ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund) is an investment fund that tracks an index (like the FTSE 100 or MSCI World) and trades on a stock exchange like a share. You can buy and sell throughout the trading day. ETFs are typically very low-cost (0.05-0.25% annual charges), broadly diversified, transparent about holdings, and available inside a stocks and shares ISA. For most long-term UK investors contributing monthly, ETFs and traditional index tracker funds are practically interchangeable — both provide the same market exposure at similar cost.
ETFs have become one of the most popular investment tools available to UK investors. Understanding what distinguishes them from other funds — and why they're so widely used — helps you decide whether and how to incorporate them into your own portfolio.
What an ETF Actually Is
An ETF is a basket of assets packaged into a single security that trades on a stock exchange. When you buy one share of an ETF, you're buying a proportional stake in all the assets the fund holds.
The "exchange-traded" part is what distinguishes an ETF from a traditional unit trust or OEIC (Open-Ended Investment Company). Traditional funds are priced once daily, at end of day. ETFs trade throughout the day at live prices, like individual company shares.
For most long-term investors making monthly contributions, this intraday trading feature doesn't matter much. But it provides price transparency throughout the trading day and makes ETFs slightly more flexible for more sophisticated uses.
Physical vs Synthetic ETFs
Physical replication
The ETF actually holds the underlying assets it tracks. A FTSE 100 physical ETF owns shares in all 100 FTSE 100 companies in proportion to their index weight. When the index changes composition, the ETF adjusts accordingly. Most mainstream UK retail ETFs use physical replication.
Synthetic replication
The ETF uses financial contracts (swaps) with a counterparty bank to deliver the index return without holding the underlying assets. This can reduce tracking error and access difficult markets. Introduces counterparty risk — if the swap provider fails, the ETF may not deliver its promised return. Suitable for sophisticated investors; most beginners should stick with physical ETFs.
ETFs vs Traditional Index Funds: Practical Differences
- Trading: ETFs trade throughout the day; index funds price once daily
- Minimum investment: many ETFs can be bought for the price of one share (sometimes under £50); some index funds require £100-£1,000 minimum
- Charges: comparable — both typically 0.1-0.2% for major indices
- Regular investment: more platforms support automated regular investing in funds than ETFs, though this is improving
For a long-term ISA investor making monthly contributions, the choice between an ETF and an index fund tracking the same index is largely cosmetic — both provide the same market exposure at similar annual cost.
Buying ETFs in the UK
- Open a stocks and shares ISA with an ETF-supporting platform
- Search by name or ticker (e.g. VWRP for Vanguard FTSE All-World ETF)
- Choose accumulation (dividends reinvested) or distribution (dividends paid out) share class
- Set up a regular monthly purchase or make lump-sum investments
Frequently Asked Questions
Are ETFs safe?
ETFs carry the market risk of the assets they track — a 20% fall in the MSCI World produces a roughly 20% fall in a World ETF. They're regulated, transparent, and no riskier than the underlying index they track. UCITS-compliant ETFs (the standard for UK-retail ETFs) carry additional investor protections.
What does "accumulation" vs "income" mean on an ETF?
Accumulation (Acc): dividends are automatically reinvested within the fund — the unit price grows to reflect this. Income (Inc or Dist): dividends are paid out to you as cash. Inside an ISA, accumulation is usually the better choice for long-term growth as reinvestment is handled automatically.
For ETF comparisons and screening, justETF UK is one of the best dedicated resources available.
