Singapore ETF Expense Ratio 2026 – see full definition below. For informational purposes only – not financial advice.
Table of Contents
- How Expense Ratios Affect ETF Returns in Singapore
- Key Singapore ETF Expense Ratios for 2026
- SGX vs London vs US-Listed ETFs: Cost Comparison
- Minimising ETF Costs: Beyond the Expense Ratio
How Expense Ratios Affect ETF Returns in Singapore
An expense ratio of 1% versus 0.2% may seem small, but over 20 years on a S$100,000 investment, the difference compounds significantly. At 7% gross annual return: a 0.2% TER ETF grows to approximately S$358,000; a 1.0% TER ETF grows to only S$304,000 — a S$54,000 difference attributable entirely to fees. Expense ratios are automatically deducted from the fund NAV daily — they do not appear as a separate charge on your brokerage statement but silently reduce your returns every day.
Key Singapore ETF Expense Ratios for 2026
Representative expense ratios for popular ETFs (as at early 2026): CSPX (iShares Core S&P 500, USD, London): 0.07%. VWRA (Vanguard FTSE All-World, USD, London): 0.22%. ES3 (SPDR STI ETF, SGD, SGX): 0.30%. A35 (ABF Singapore Bond Index Fund, SGD, SGX): 0.24%. CLR (NikkoAM-STC Asia REIT ETF, SGD, SGX): approximately 0.55%. Always verify the current TER on the fund provider factsheet as expense ratios can change annually.
SGX vs London vs US-Listed ETFs: Cost Comparison
Singapore investors often choose between SGX-listed ETFs (SGD-denominated, CPFIS/SRS eligible) and offshore ETFs (USD-denominated, London or US exchanges). Offshore ETFs generally have lower expense ratios — CSPX at 0.07% versus comparable SGX-listed ETFs — but come with USD currency risk and may not be CPFIS-eligible. For CPF OA investments, only CPFIS-approved funds are permitted (typically SGX-listed ETFs). For SRS and cash accounts, offshore ETFs via Interactive Brokers or Saxo offer lower TER.
Minimising ETF Costs: Beyond the Expense Ratio
The expense ratio is not the only cost. Also consider: Bid-ask spread — less liquid ETFs on SGX may have wider spreads. Brokerage fees — FSMOne charges 0.08% (min S$10); Tiger Brokers and Moomoo offer lower fees for some ETFs. Tracking error — some ETFs do not perfectly replicate their index. Dividend withholding tax — Ireland-domiciled ETFs (CSPX, VWRA) benefit from the Ireland-US tax treaty, reducing US dividend withholding from 30% to 15%.