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Buying & owning

How to buy & own an ETF

From opening a broker account to placing an order, savings plans, and handling dividends.

In short

Buying an ETF means opening an account with a broker, searching for the fund by its name or ISIN, and placing an order — or setting up a savings plan that buys a little each month automatically. After that, owning it is mostly leaving it alone and deciding how to handle any dividends.

Start here

How do you actually buy an ETF?

The practical steps — from opening a broker account to placing your first order, start to finish.

More in Buying & owning

Read them in any order — each one takes a few minutes.

Common questions

How do I actually buy an ETF?

Open a broker account, search for the fund by name or ISIN, choose how much to invest, and place the order — or automate it with a savings plan.

What is a savings plan?

A standing instruction that buys a set amount of an ETF each month, so you invest steadily without trying to time the market.

What happens to my dividends?

That depends on the share class: an accumulating ETF reinvests them for you, a distributing ETF pays them into your account.

Key terms on this page

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Finance Hamster provides educational information about ETFs and investing. It is not investment, tax, or legal advice, and not a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Markets carry risk; do your own research or consult a licensed adviser.