Search for an S&P 500 index fund and you'll find not one option but many — several ETFs, from different providers, all tracking the same 500 companies. If they own the same stocks, does it matter which you pick? It does, and the differences are small but real. Here's how to tell them apart.

Start with the expense ratio

When two funds track the same index, the expense ratio is the first and biggest lever. It's the annual fee a fund charges, taken as a percentage of the money you have invested, as Investopedia defines it. For index funds it can be a tiny fraction of a percent — but tiny differences compound.

Consider two funds tracking the identical index, one charging 0.03% and another 0.09%. On $50,000, that's the difference between roughly $15 and $45 a year. Trivial in year one — but across decades of compounding, and on a growing balance, the cheaper fund quietly wins by a widening margin. Because the underlying holdings are the same, the fee is a near-guaranteed head start: the lower-cost fund keeps more of the index's return in your pocket. All else equal, cheaper is better.

But "all else" isn't always equal

Fee is the headline, not the whole story. A few other factors matter:

  • Tracking difference. No fund matches its index perfectly. Tracking error measures how closely a fund follows the index it's meant to copy, per Investopedia. A well-run fund with a slightly higher fee can occasionally track more tightly; check how closely each has actually mirrored the index over time, not just the sticker fee.
  • Liquidity and spreads. Since ETFs trade on an exchange, a large, heavily traded fund usually has a narrower bid-ask spread — the small gap between buying and selling prices — which lowers your real trading cost. For a big, popular index this rarely differs much, but it can matter for smaller funds.
  • Share price and structure. Two funds on the same index can have very different share prices; a lower price can make it easier to invest an exact dollar amount, though fractional shares increasingly make this moot. Also confirm both are structured the same way (most broad index ETFs are plain, fully-invested funds).
  • Taxes and distributions. In taxable accounts, how efficiently a fund handles capital-gains distributions can create small differences over time.

Don't over-optimize

Here's the balancing truth: when funds track the same index, the choice is a rounding error compared with the big decisions — whether you invest at all, how much, how consistently, and how broadly diversified you are. Picking the fund with the lowest fee and adequate liquidity is a sound default, but agonizing between two near-identical, ultra-cheap funds is time better spent elsewhere, a spirit echoed in basic investor guidance.

The takeaway

When two ETFs hold the same index, favor the one with the lowest expense ratio, then sanity-check that it tracks its index well and is liquid enough to trade cheaply. That's usually the entire decision. Boursel gives no investment advice; the useful principle is that with identical holdings, cost is the one edge you can lock in — so don't pay more than you have to for the very same thing.