Vanguard VTI vs. Schwab SCHB: Which Broad Market ETF Is the Better Buy for Investors?
Vanguard’s VTI and Schwab’s SCHB are priced and structured so similarly that the key debate for investors is diversification depth and portfolio scale rather than fees or headline income. Both ETFs charge a 0.03% expense ratio and show comparable trailing-12-month distribution yields of 1.01%. The cost and performance comparison centers on holdings and index coverage: VTI tracks the CRSP US Total Market Index and reaches nearly 3,500 stocks, extending deeper into small-cap segments than SCHB. SCHB holds 2,356 stocks and follows the Dow Jones U.S. Broad Stock Market Index, which results in a slightly higher concentration in large-cap names. Sector weights are led by technology at 37% for both funds, and their largest positions match, including Nvidia, Apple, and Microsoft. Over the past five years, the article says returns and maximum drawdowns are close, suggesting similar risk profiles. The biggest practical difference is VTI’s larger assets under management, which can improve liquidity for large trades, while VTI’s additional holdings may offer broader market exposure.




