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The fee that silently steals $100,000 from your retirement (and how to stop it)

A 1% annual expense ratio sounds harmless. Over 30 years, it can cost you over $100,000 in lost returns. Here's how to find it and eliminate it.

What is an expense ratio?

Every mutual fund and ETF charges an annual fee called the expense ratio โ€” a percentage of your assets deducted automatically each year. You never see an invoice. The money is quietly taken from your fund's returns before you see them.

A 0.03% expense ratio (like Vanguard's VTI) costs $3 per year on a $10,000 investment. A 1.0% expense ratio costs $100 on the same investment. That difference compounds dramatically over time.

The real cost: On a $50,000 portfolio growing at 7% over 30 years, a 1% expense ratio vs 0.03% costs you approximately $112,000 in lost wealth. The fee isn't just money you paid โ€” it's the compounding those dollars would have generated.

0.03%
Vanguard VTI expense ratio (world-class low)
0.20%
Acceptable maximum for index funds
1.0%+
Typical actively managed fund โ€” avoid

How to find your expense ratio

Log into your 401k or brokerage account. Find the fund name. Google "[fund name] expense ratio" โ€” it's public information. Alternatively, look it up on Morningstar or the fund's prospectus. If you're paying over 0.50%, you should seriously consider switching to a lower-cost alternative.

Check if your 401k funds are costing you too much. Our paths page explains how to decode your plan.

Decode Your 401k โ†’
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or tax advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor for personalized guidance.

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