Balance Your TFSA: A Top Strategic Canadian ETF to Own

VFV is one of the best ETFs for your TFSA. It tracks the S&P 500, costs almost nothing to hold, and gives you a front-row seat to the AI revolution.

| More on:
Key Points
  • The Vanguard S&P 500 Index ETF tracks the 500 largest U.S. companies, giving Canadian investors broad exposure with a single purchase.
  • VFV has delivered an annual compound return of 16.60% since its inception in November 2012, according to Vanguard Canada's March 2026 factsheet.
  • With a management expense ratio of just 0.09%, VFV is one of the most cost-efficient ways for Canadians to participate in the U.S. market.

If there is one exchange-traded fund (ETF) every Canadian investor should consider holding inside their Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA), it is the Vanguard S&P 500 Index ETF (TSX:VFV).

It is simple, low-cost, and has an enviable track record. Over the long run, this ETF has turned modest contributions into serious wealth, and I think it should form the core of most Canadian portfolios.

ETFs can contain investments such as stocks

Source: Getty Images

Why VFV belongs in your TFSA right now

Here is the simplest way to think about VFV. When you buy this ETF, you are buying a slice of 500 of the biggest companies in America. The fund invests across industries, ranging from technology to banking and healthcare.

In 2026, a significant portion of its holdings is geared towards companies that are reshaping how the world works through artificial intelligence (AI).

NVIDIA is the largest holding in the VFV ETF, accounting for 7.6% of the fund. The other key holdings include Apple at 6.7%, Alphabet at 5.4%, and Microsoft at 4.9%.

These are the companies that spend tens of billions of dollars on AI infrastructure, software, and chips. They are the central players in the (AI) race.

NVIDIA is building the chips that power AI data centres worldwide. Alphabet and Microsoft are embedding AI into every product they sell.

Information technology accounts for 32.9% of the VFV ETF, with communication services adding another 10.3%. When you hold VFV, you are buying a front-row seat to one of the most important technological shifts in modern history.

So when people ask whether VFV is still relevant in today’s market, the answer is yes. Possibly more than ever.

A track record built over more than a decade

A $10,000 investment in VFV at inception would have grown to $72,890 today. If we adjust for dividend reinvestments, cumulative returns are closer to $88,790.

On a year-by-year basis, the fund returned 12.3% in 2025, 35.24% in 2024, 23.25% in 2023, and 27.64% in 2021.

The rough patch came in 2022, when rising interest rates sent markets tumbling, and VFV fell 12.7%. But investors who held through that period were quickly rewarded.

That resilience is part of what makes this ETF worth owning for the long haul.

What makes VFV a smart TFSA play

Inside a TFSA, the VFV ETF becomes even more powerful. Every bit of growth, and every quarterly distribution is yours to keep. Over decades of compounding, that tax shelter adds up to a meaningful difference in your final balance.

The cost to hold VFV is quite low. The management expense ratio is 0.09%, which amounts to $0.90 per $1,000 invested annually. There is no trailing commission either, per Vanguard Canada’s documentation.

In addition to price appreciation, the fund pays quarterly distributions. In 2025, that came to roughly $1.53 per unit. Back in 2012, when the fund was started, it paid out just $0.15 per unit. That quiet, steady growth in distributions over 13 years tells you something about the quality of what sits inside this ETF.

In a nutshell, VFV does the heavy lifting in the background while you get on with your life.

Fool contributor Aditya Raghunath has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Investing

groceries get more expensive as inflation rises
Investing

1 Canadian Dividend Stock I’d Buy Before Inflation Heats Up Again

Restaurant Brands International (TSX:QSR) stock looks like a dividend winner that can keep it up despite inflation.

Read more »

Concept of multiple streams of income
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian Stocks With the Potential to Triple in Value Within 5 Years

Add these three TSX growth stocks to your portfolio if you’re on the hunt for potentially three-fold returns on your…

Read more »

man in business suit pulls a piece out of wobbly wooden tower
Dividend Stocks

Undervalued Canadian Stocks to Buy Now

Three undervalued Canadian stocks are buying opportunities now for their upside potential and more.

Read more »

happy woman throws cash
Dividend Stocks

How to Turn a $14,000 TFSA Into a Cash-Generating Machine

Given their reliable cash flows, healthy growth prospects, and high yields, these two monthly-paying dividend stocks can boost your monthly…

Read more »

Investing

The Canadian Stocks I’d Be Most Comfortable Buying and Holding in a TFSA Forever

Given its resilient business model, healthy growth prospects, and discounted stock price, Dollarama would be an ideal addition to your…

Read more »

Hourglass and stock price chart
Dividend Stocks

1 High-Yield Dividend Stock You Can Hold for Decades of Income

This company has increased its dividend annually for more than three decades.

Read more »

senior couple looks at investing statements
Dividend Stocks

How to Create Your Own Pension With Canadian Dividend Stocks

Given their dependable cash flows, visible growth pipeline, and attractive yield, these two Canadian stocks are ideal for income-seeking investors.

Read more »

a man celebrates his good fortune with a disco ball and confetti
Energy Stocks

Here’s What Enbridge Stock Could Look Like by the End of 2026

Explore Enbridge's growth drivers responsible for its strong stock price rally and whether more upside is to come.

Read more »