

Another year, another series of milestones for the ETF industry. When we started surveying the best exchange-traded funds available to Canadian investors in 2012, they were just a new niche in Canada’s investment industry for DIY and couch potato investors. Today, by contrast, they’ve surpassed mutual funds in sales for three straight years and many investment advisors and financial planners use these assets for clients now, too.
Canadians use ETFs to populate not just their retirement accounts but tax-free savings accounts (TFSAs), registered education funds (RESPs), first-home savings accounts (FHSAs) and taxable accounts—wherever they might benefit from the wide diversification, liquidity and low fees that ETFs provide.
Featured accounts
sponsored
Savings account

Get up to 3.50% interest on your savings without any fees.
go to site
sponsored
1-year GIC

Lock in your deposit and earn a guaranteed interest rate of 3.60%.
go to site
featured
Savings account

Earn 3.7% for 7 months on eligible deposits up to $500k. Offer ends June 30, 2025.
got to site
Why trust us
MoneySense is an award-winning magazine, helping Canadians navigate money matters since 1999. Our editorial team of trained journalists works closely with leading personal finance experts in Canada. To help you find the best financial products, we compare the offerings from over 12 major institutions, including banks, credit unions and card issuers. Learn more about our advertising and trusted partners.
The best ETFs in Canada for 2024
| ETF | Ticker | Best ETFs category |
|---|---|---|
| BMO Aggregate Bond Index ETF | ZAG | Fixed income ETFs |
| BMO Money Market Fund ETF | ZMMK | Best cash alternative ETFs |
| BMO MSCI EAFE Index ETF | ZEA | International equity ETFs |
| BMO S&P/TSX Capped Composite Index ETF | ZCN | Canadian Equity ETFs |
| Global X Cash Maximizer Corporate Class ETF | HSAV | Best cash alternative ETFs |
| Global X High Interest Savings ETF | CASH | Best cash alternative ETFs |
| iShares Core Balanced ETF Portfolio | XBAL | One-decision ETFs |
| iShares Core Canadian Short Term Bond Index ETF | XSB | Fixed income ETFs |
| iShares Core Canadian Universe Bond Index ETF | XBB | Fixed income ETFs |
| iShares Core Equity ETF Portfolio | XEQT | One-decision ETFs |
| iShares Core MSCI EAFE IMI Index ETF | XEF | International equity ETFs |
| iShares Core S&P U.S. Total Market Index ETF | XUU | U.S. Equity ETFs |
| iShares Core S&P/TSX Capped Composite Index ETF | XIC | Canadian Equity ETFs |
| Purpose High Interest Savings ETF | PSA | Best cash alternative ETFs |
| TD Growth ETF Portfolio | TGRO | One-decision ETFs |
| Vanguard FTSE Canada All-Cap Equity ETF | VCN | Canadian Equity ETFs |
| Vanguard FTSE Developed All-Cap ex-North America index ETF | VIU | International equity ETFs |
| Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap Index ETF | VEE | International equity ETFs |
| Vanguard S&P 500 Index ETF | VFV | U.S. Equity ETFs |
| Vanguard Short-term Canadian Bond ETF | VSB | Fixed income ETFs |
| Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF | VTI | U.S. Equity ETFs |
| Vanguard US Total Market Index ETF | VUN | U.S. Equity ETFs |
In Canada, the ETF inflows in 2024 smashed the old record set in 2021 of $53 billion, with a net investment of $76 billion. With more than $500 billion in assets under management, Canadian ETFs now hold roughly one-fifth the total of mutual funds. The story is even more pronounced stateside, where ETF inflows last year surged past USD$1 trillion.
With that popularity has come a huge proliferation of new funds, especially the actively managed kind. More than half the ETFs now trading in Canada are actively managed. However investors’ preference still leans heavily towards passive funds that track a published index and typically have very low fees. They represent 69% of assets under management.
So how is the typical Canadian investor supposed to choose from among all that’s on offer? That’s where MoneySense’s Best ETFs guide comes in.
Our methodology—How we choose the Best ETFs in Canada
For 2025, we assembled a panel of 10 investment advisors, analysts, coaches and bloggers to recommend funds with a combination of appropriate market exposure, low fees, liquidity and good past performance that would sit well within any Canadian retail investor’s portfolio. Then we asked our panel to vote on a long list of nominee funds in six different asset categories:
- Canadian equities
- U.S. equities
- International equities
- Fixed income
- Cash alternative
- One-decision
The three ETFs (or more, in the case of a tie) with the highest number of votes in each category are listed below.
While our judges considered active, factor and sector-specific funds, the consensus tended to push our final picks toward low-cost, index funds that will appeal to most ETF investors. Lest our recommendations get too boring—and, let’s face it, smart investing usually is boring—we also offered our judges the opportunity to pick a more exotic “desert island” ETF that wouldn’t typically rise to the top of our voting process.
Of course, the ETF landscape is not immune to the volatility that’s taken hold in markets generally in 2025.
“Given the current state of chaos, having a broad exposure to baskets of different assets that are diversified globally is a reasonable approach, and my ETF picks will be leaning on this narrative,” remarked panellist Aman Raina, who is a Canadian investment coach.
Table of contents: Best ETFs for Canadian Investors
- Best Canadian ETFs
- Best U.S. ETFs
- Best international ETFs
- Best fixed-income ETFs
- Best all-in-one ETFs
- Best cash-alternative ETFs
- Desert-island ETF picks
Meet the MoneySense “Best ETFs in Canada” panel

Tony Dong is the founder and owner of ETF Portfolio Blueprint. He graduated in 2023 from Columbia University with a Master’s degree in risk management. He holds the Certified ETF Advisor (CETF) designation from The ETF Institute and has passed both the Canadian Securities Course and FINRA’s Securities Industry Essentials.

Alain Guillot is a former financial advisor, but now maintains his personal finance blog, alainguillot.com, which launched in 2013.

Travis Koivula is a Senior Wealth Advisor with Island Savings Wealth Management and Aviso Wealth in Victoria. He helps small-business owners and executives make better financial decisions and live with fewer regrets.

Mark McGrath is a semi-retired financial planner and associate portfolio manager, formerly with PWL Capital. For the past decade, he has worked primarily with Canadian physicians and their families, helping them make sound financial decisions around portfolio management, retirement planning, tax planning, estate planning and risk management.

Aman Raina iis an investment coach and founder of Sage Investors. He teaches individual investors how to make successful investment decisions buying/selling stocks and ETFs.

Michelle Robertson is a financial planner, a CPA and founder of wealth and financial planning company Ms. Money and Math. She simplifies money for women who want to multiply their net worth so they have the freedom to build a life they love.
Michael McCulloughSource