---
title: "What is Passive Investing?"
description: "What is passive investing? The simple way to buy and hold stocks, and why it can work well for your portfolio."
canonical_url: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-passive-investing
markdown_url: https://trendshare.org/ai/what-is-passive-investing.md
published: 2015-12-28
last_updated: 2026-02-15
content_license: https://trendshare.org/about/disclaimer
---
# What is Passive Investing?

Source: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-passive-investing
Updated: 2026-02-15
If the stock market seems daunting to you, it may be because there are so
many choices. Which of the tens of thousands of available stocks is right for
you? Which businesses will make money and which are teetering on the edge of
bankruptcy?

It's tempting for people to go to a professional money manager for
advice—even to make their trades for them—but [the fees you pay for this service](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/broker-fees) aren't often worth it.
Sure, he or she will pick investments for you and make trades for you, based on
an understanding of your goals and risk prospect, but are you getting what you
pay for? Are you getting the investments that are *right* for you, or
the investments that someone wants to sell you?

Fortunately, there's a better way: **passive investing**. Instead of trying to pick individual winners or pay someone to do it, you invest in a diversified portfolio of stocks or bonds through an **index fund** or **ETF** (exchange-traded fund). You hold it for the long term. That's it. This approach doesn't take much effort, earns respectable returns, and doesn't waste your money on unnecessary fees.

## Passive Investing Defined

Passive investing is a strategy of buying low-cost index funds or ETFs that
track a market benchmark, then holding them over a long period of time. Rather
than trying to pick individual winners or time the market, you simply match the
market's performance. It's characterized by a few important features:

- The investments track an index (such as the S&P 500 or Total Market Index) rather than being actively selected

- The period of holding tends to be years or decades with minimal trading

- Fees are extremely low (typically 0.03-0.10% annually) compared to active management (0.50-1.00%+)

- Your returns mirror the market's returns, minus small tracking fees

If you were to start today at age 25, you could [put $10,000 in a low-cost S&P 500 index fund](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/buy-the-s&p-index-fund) and wait 40 years until you retire with a nest egg worth approximately
$452,000 (assuming the historical 10% average annual return). That's as simple
as this can be. Yet there is nuance to this technique.

## Advantages of Passive Investing

Passive investing offers several compelling benefits. Here are the main
reasons it works so well for many investors:

### Lower Fees

The biggest advantage is cost. Passive index funds have dramatically lower fees than actively managed funds. According to the [Investment Company Institute](https://www.ici.org/)'s 2024 data, passive index equity mutual funds charge an average of 0.05% annually in expense ratios, compared to 0.65% for actively managed equity funds. That's a 13x difference in fees.

Over decades of investing, this fee difference compounds dramatically. For
example, $100,000 invested for 30 years at an 8% annual return would grow to
approximately $1,006,000 with a 0.05% fee, versus $906,000 with a 0.65% fee: a
difference of $100,000 lost to fees. Because passive funds simply track an index
rather than employing teams of expensive research analysts and portfolio
managers, they pass those savings directly to you.

Popular low-cost index funds include the [Vanguard S&P 500 Index Fund (VFIAX)](https://investor.vanguard.com/investment-products/mutual-funds/profile/vfiax) with a 0.04% expense ratio and the [Fidelity ZERO Total Market Index Fund (FZROX)](https://www.fidelity.com/mutual-funds/investing-ideas/index-funds) with a 0% expense ratio.

### Tax Efficiency

Because you're not frequently buying and selling securities, passive investing generates far fewer taxable capital gains events than active trading. Index funds typically have portfolio turnover rates of 3-5% annually, compared to 60-100%+ for actively managed funds, according to [Morningstar](https://www.morningstar.com/) data. You won't trigger short-term capital gains taxes (taxed at ordinary income rates up to 37%) the way an active trader does.

This means more of your returns stay in your portfolio, compounding over
time. In taxable brokerage accounts, this tax efficiency can add an extra
0.5-1.0% to your annual after-tax returns. (Note: You may still owe taxes on
dividends depending on your account type, though qualified dividends are taxed
at preferential rates of 0-20%.)

### Simplicity

Passive investing removes the need to research individual stocks or time the
market. Pick a couple of good index funds, make the trade, and wait. You're in
the investment for the long term; there's no need to check market prices every
day. It's easy to continue investing with a strategy such as [dollar cost averaging](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-dollar-cost-averaging)—add $100,
$500, or $1000 every month and let your investments grow. If you've already
found a great place to put your money, why not keep investing there? This
approach is very compatible with [dividend reinvesting](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-dividend-reinvesting), which some funds automate for you.

### Instant Diversification

When you invest in a broad index fund like the S&P 500, you're instantly owning pieces of 500 large US companies across different sectors. As of December 2025, that includes major holdings like [Apple](/stocks/AAPL/view) (technology), [Microsoft](/stocks/MSFT/view) (technology), [NVIDIA](/stocks/NVDA/view) (semiconductors), [Amazon](/stocks/AMZN/view) (consumer retail/cloud), [Meta](/stocks/META/view) (social media), [Berkshire Hathaway](/stocks/BRK.B/view) (financial services), [JPMorgan Chase](/stocks/JPM/view) (banking), [Johnson & Johnson](/stocks/JNJ/view) (healthcare), and [ExxonMobil](/stocks/XOM/view) (energy).

This instant diversification reduces risk compared to holding just a few
individual stocks. A market downturn in one industry (like technology) is
cushioned by strength in others (like healthcare or energy). According to [S&P Dow Jones Indices](https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/indices/equity/sp-500/), the S&P 500 spans 11 sectors, preventing overexposure to
any single industry's fortunes.

### Employer-Sponsored Plans

Passive investing is very compatible with 401(k) accounts through your employer. Most plans let you select from low-cost index funds, such as the S&P 500 index fund or a total market fund. If you leave your employer, you can roll your 401(k) into a self-directed brokerage account and access the entire universe of index funds.

## Disadvantages of Passive Investing

### You Can't Beat the Market

This is the fundamental tradeoff with passive investing. By definition, a passive index fund will never significantly outperform its benchmark index. If the S&P 500 returns 10%, your S&P 500 index fund will return approximately 9.95% after a 0.05% fee. You won't find years where passive funds dramatically outpace the market.

Interestingly, this limitation is actually an advantage when compared to
active management. According to [S&P's SPIVA (S&P Indices Versus Active) Scorecard](https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/research-insights/spiva/),
over 90% of actively managed large-cap US equity funds underperformed the
S&P 500 over the 15-year period ending in 2024. The few that do outperform
in one period rarely maintain that outperformance consistently. For investors
seeking outsized returns through stock picking, passive investing isn't the
answer. The data suggests most stock pickers don't beat the market either.

### You're Exposed to Full Market Risk

When the market drops, passive investors take the full hit with no hedging strategies. Market downturns happen regularly. According to [S&P data](https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/indices/equity/sp-500/), the 2022 bear market saw the S&P 500 fall 18.1% for the year, and the 2020 pandemic crash initially dropped the market 34% from peak to trough before recovering. Seeing your portfolio down 20-30% on paper can be disheartening.

However, if you're investing for the long term and contributing money monthly
through [dollar-cost averaging](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-dollar-cost-averaging),
you're actually buying stocks at a discount when prices are low. Market history
shows that recoveries consistently follow downturns. The S&P 500 has
recovered from every bear market in history, and its long-term trajectory
remains upward despite periodic setbacks. Patience is rewarded over decades.

### Limited Flexibility

Your choices are limited to the specific index you choose. If you believe a particular sector is overvalued, you can't reduce that exposure in a passive index fund. You're locked into the fund's holdings unless you sell the entire position. This lack of flexibility is the price you pay for low fees and simple execution.

### Sector Concentration Risk

Large-cap indices like the S&P 500 can become concentrated in a few mega-cap stocks or sectors. For example, as of late 2025, technology and communication services collectively represent approximately 40% of the S&P 500's total market capitalization, with just the "Magnificent Seven" stocks (Apple, Microsoft, NVIDIA, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, and Tesla) accounting for nearly 30% of the index's weight.

If you're concerned about this concentration, you might diversify across
multiple indices such as a total US market fund (which includes mid-cap and
small-cap stocks), international developed markets, emerging markets, and bond
indices rather than relying solely on the S&P 500.

## How to Get Started with Passive Investing

### Choose Your Index

The most popular choice for US investors is the S&P 500, which represents
500 large US companies. Other common options include:

- **Total US Market Index:** Covers large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap stocks (broader diversification than S&P 500)

- **Total Bond Market Index:** For fixed-income investors seeking steady returns
 - **International Index:** Exposure to developed and emerging markets outside the US
 - **Target-Date Funds:** Automatically adjust from stocks to bonds as you approach retirement
 

### Choose Between an Index Mutual Fund or ETF

Both track indices, but they differ slightly.  With an index mutual fund, you
buy shares at the end of each trading day. You can set up automatic monthly
contributions easily. Minimum investments vary.

**ETFs (Exchange-Traded Funds)** trade like stocks throughout
the day. They have a lower minimum investment (one share), but you pay per-trade
commissions (usually $0-10 at major brokers).

For most passive investors, either choice works well. Many people use ETFs
for their flexibility and low minimums.

### Open a Brokerage Account

Choose [a low-cost discount broker](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-a-discount-stock-broker) such as [Vanguard](https://investor.vanguard.com/), [Fidelity](https://www.fidelity.com/), [Charles Schwab](https://www.schwab.com/), or robo-advisors like [Betterment](https://www.betterment.com/) or [Wealthfront](https://www.wealthfront.com/). These platforms offer commission-free trading on most index funds and ETFs, making it easy and affordable to get started.

If you have an employer-sponsored 401(k) plan, start there first to capture
any employer match—that's free money. Most 401(k) plans offer at least one
S&P 500 index fund option.

### Invest and Rebalance

Once you've chosen your index vehicle, invest your initial lump sum and then
set up monthly contributions via automatic transfers. Revisit your portfolio
annually and [rebalance](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-rebalancing) if your target
allocation has drifted significantly.

## Passive Investing vs. Active Investing: Where Does Passive Fit?

<!-- Comparison Table -->

  
    <table class="tw-min-w-full tw-divide-y tw-divide-gray-200">
      <thead class="tw-bg-blue-50">
        <tr>
          <th scope="col" class="tw-px-6 tw-py-3 tw-text-left tw-text-xs tw-font-semibold tw-text-gray-900 tw-uppercase tw-tracking-wider">Factor</th>
          <th scope="col" class="tw-px-6 tw-py-3 tw-text-left tw-text-xs tw-font-semibold tw-text-blue-700 tw-uppercase tw-tracking-wider">Passive Investing</th>
          <th scope="col" class="tw-px-6 tw-py-3 tw-text-left tw-text-xs tw-font-semibold tw-text-gray-700 tw-uppercase tw-tracking-wider">Active Investing</th>
        </tr>
      </thead>
      <tbody class="tw-bg-white tw-divide-y tw-divide-gray-200">
        <tr class="hover:tw-bg-gray-50 tw-transition-colors">
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-font-medium tw-text-gray-900">Average Annual Fee</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-blue-800 tw-font-medium">0.05%</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-gray-700">0.65%</td>
        </tr>
        <tr class="hover:tw-bg-gray-50 tw-transition-colors">
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-font-medium tw-text-gray-900">Portfolio Turnover</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-blue-800 tw-font-medium">3-5%</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-gray-700">60-100%+</td>
        </tr>
        <tr class="hover:tw-bg-gray-50 tw-transition-colors">
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-font-medium tw-text-gray-900">Tax Efficiency</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-blue-800 tw-font-medium">High (few taxable events)</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-gray-700">Low (frequent trading)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr class="hover:tw-bg-gray-50 tw-transition-colors">
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-font-medium tw-text-gray-900">Time Required</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-blue-800 tw-font-medium">Minimal (set and forget)</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-gray-700">Significant (research & monitoring)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr class="hover:tw-bg-gray-50 tw-transition-colors">
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-font-medium tw-text-gray-900">Expected Returns</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-blue-800 tw-font-medium">Market return (~10% S&P 500 historical)</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-gray-700">Varies (90% underperform benchmark)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr class="hover:tw-bg-gray-50 tw-transition-colors">
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-font-medium tw-text-gray-900">Risk Management</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-blue-800 tw-font-medium">Full market exposure</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-gray-700">Flexible (hedging possible)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr class="hover:tw-bg-gray-50 tw-transition-colors">
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-font-medium tw-text-gray-900">Diversification</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-blue-800 tw-font-medium">Instant (500+ stocks in S&P 500)</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-gray-700">Variable (depends on picks)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr class="hover:tw-bg-gray-50 tw-transition-colors">
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-font-medium tw-text-gray-900">Beating the Market</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-blue-800 tw-font-medium">No (tracks index)</td>
          <td class="tw-px-6 tw-py-4 tw-text-sm tw-text-gray-700">Possible (but rare long-term)</td>
        </tr>
      </tbody>
    </table>
  

  <!-- Download Button for CSV -->
  
    <button
      id="downloadComparisonBtn"
      class="tw-bg-blue-600 tw-text-white tw-text-sm tw-font-semibold tw-py-2 tw-px-4 tw-rounded-md hover:tw-bg-blue-700 tw-transition tw-duration-200 focus:tw-outline-none focus:tw-ring-2 focus:tw-ring-blue-500 focus:tw-ring-offset-2"
      type="button"
    >
      📥 Download Comparison Data (CSV)
    </button>
  

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## Passive Investing Calculator: See Your Results

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<!-- HowTo Schema for Using the Calculator -->

Is a passive investing strategy compatible with [value investing](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-value-investing)? It can be! Passive investing
and value investing aren't mutually exclusive. In fact, many value investors use
a hybrid approach. A core holding (50-70%) in a broad index fund like the
S&P 500 or total market index provides steady, diversified returns with
minimal effort and fees. Active picks (30-50%) as the remainder of the portfolio
can be individual stock picks where you apply value investing discipline.

This hybrid strategy lets you enjoy the simplicity and low fees of passive
investing while still pursuing higher returns through selective active
investing. When you do own individual stocks, you're working with a solid
foundation of diversification rather than putting all your eggs in a few
baskets.

The long-term returns of passive investing are respectable. According to [S&P Dow Jones Indices](https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/indices/equity/sp-500/), the S&P 500 has delivered an average annual return of
approximately 10% over the past 50 years (including dividends), though
individual 20-year periods have ranged from 6-10% depending on starting and
ending dates. If you're capable of and interested in actively managing some of
your own investments, targeting higher returns is possible. The simplicity
of passive investing, especially in low-cost, low-churn index funds, gives you a
real advantage: consistent, market-matching returns without the time, stress,
research burden, and fees that active management demands.
