Index funds vs. mutual funds: What’s the difference?

New investors often want to know the difference between index funds and mutual funds. The thing is, sometimes index funds are mutual funds and sometimes mutual funds are index funds.

Last updated on January 30, 2023, and last reviewed by an expert on January 17, 2022.

New investors often want to know the difference between index funds and mutual funds. The thing is, sometimes index funds are mutual funds and sometimes mutual funds are index funds. It’s like asking the difference between apples and sweet food. Apples can be sweet or sour, while sweet food includes more than just apples. So it is with mutual funds and index funds.

Here are the key features, as well as the pros and cons of mutual funds and index funds.

Index funds vs. mutual funds

Index funds and mutual funds both offer investors the chance to invest in a diversified collection of assets. Here’s how they stack up:

Suggested read: Active investing vs. passive investing: What’s the difference?

As you can see, sometimes an index fund is a mutual fund, and sometimes a mutual fund is an index fund.

To say it another way, investors can buy an index fund that’s either an ETF or mutual fund. They can also buy a mutual fund that’s a passively managed index fund or an actively managed one.

The pros and cons of an index fund

An index fund can offer a number of pros and cons. Here are some of the most important.

Pros of an index fund

Cons of an index fund

The pros and cons of a mutual fund

A mutual fund can offer a number of pros and cons. Here are some of the most important.

Suggested read: Mutual fund vs. ETF: Are ETFs a better investment?

Pros of a mutual fund

Cons of a mutual fund

Should you invest in these funds actively or passively?

Whether it’s the pros doing it or individual investors, active management tends to lead to underperformance. Passive investing is an attractive approach for most investors, especially because it requires less time, attention and analysis and still generates higher returns.

If you’re investing in an actively managed mutual fund, you want to let the manager do its job. If you’re trading in and out of the fund, you’re second-guessing professional investors that you’ve effectively hired to invest your money. That doesn’t make a lot of sense, and it can ring up capital gains taxes, if the fund is held in a taxable account, as well as fees for early redemption of your mutual fund.

Actively trading an index fund also doesn’t make a lot of sense, either. An index fund is by its nature a passively managed investment, so you’re buying the index to get its long-term return. If you trade in and out of the fund, even if it’s a low-cost ETF, you may easily lower your returns. Imagine selling in March 2020 as the market crumbled, only to watch it skyrocket over the next year.

Again, passive investing beats active investing most of the time and more so over time.

Suggested read: How to buy an S&P 500 index fund

The bottom line

Index funds and mutual funds are not exclusive categories, though it can be easy to mistake them. So you can end up with stock index mutual funds, and often these stock funds are among the lowest-cost funds on the market, even more than the highly popular index ETFs. Regardless of how your fund is managed, investors will do better by passively managing their own funds.

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