ETF Screener
What the ETF screener does
There are thousands of ETFs, and picking between near-identical funds usually comes down to a few numbers: how much it costs, how big and liquid it is, what it yields, and how it has performed. The screener puts those numbers in one filterable, sortable table. Set a maximum expense ratio, a minimum fund size, a category, and a sort order, and the matching ETFs appear instantly — each linking to a full page with holdings, sector allocation and the bull-and-bear view.
How to use the ETF screener
- Pick a category — equity, sector, bond, commodity, crypto, dividend and more, or leave it on "All".
- Set a maximum expense ratio to weed out costly funds (the cheapest broad-market ETFs charge well under 0.10%).
- Set a minimum AUM in billions to focus on large, liquid funds.
- Choose a sort — largest by AUM, lowest expense, best YTD return or highest yield.
- Click any ticker to open its full ETF page.
Why expense ratio and AUM matter most
For two funds tracking the same index, the cheaper one usually wins over time, because the expense ratio is a guaranteed annual drag on returns. A 0.03% fund versus a 0.50% fund is a 0.47% head start every single year. AUM (assets under management) is a proxy for liquidity and durability: very large funds tend to have tighter bid-ask spreads and are less likely to close. The screener lets you optimise for both at once.
Tips
- For core holdings, sort by lowest expense within the equity category.
- For income, switch the category to dividend and sort by highest yield — then sanity-check the payout on the fund page.
- Compare two shortlisted funds side by side with Compare ETFs, or see who holds a stock with ETFs that hold a stock.
Frequently asked questions
What is an ETF screener?
It is a tool that filters and sorts ETFs by objective criteria such as category, expense ratio, assets under management, dividend yield and year-to-date return, so you can quickly shortlist the funds that fit what you are looking for.
What is a good expense ratio for an ETF?
Lower is better, all else equal. The cheapest broad-market index ETFs charge under 0.10% per year, while niche, thematic or leveraged funds can charge 0.5% or more. The screener lets you cap the expense ratio so only low-cost funds appear.
Why does fund size (AUM) matter?
Larger funds generally have deeper liquidity and tighter trading spreads, and are less likely to be closed by the issuer. Filtering by a minimum AUM helps you focus on big, established ETFs.
Is the ETF data live?
Prices and fund data refresh daily from free market data sources. The screener runs in your browser, so filtering and sorting are instant.
Can I screen crypto ETFs?
Yes. Choose the crypto category to see spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs such as IBIT and FBTC alongside their costs and assets.
Is this financial advice?
No. The screener is for research and education only. ETFs carry market risk and past performance does not predict future results — always read the fund prospectus and do your own research.