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iShares Core S&P 500 ETF

iShares
StocksUnknownOwns the shares
Low yearly feeOwns the shares directlyNorth America
TER ?
0.03%
Distribution
Unknown
Replication ?
Physical Full
Fund size ?
$0
Fund currency ?
USD

What this fund is

iShares Core S&P 500 ETF is an exchange-traded fund (ETF) from iShares — a single investment you can buy in one trade that bundles many holdings together, so your money is spread out instead of riding on one company. It invests in company shares (also called stocks or equities), focused on companies in the United States and Canada. It does this by actually owning the underlying investments (called physical replication). Its ongoing charge is 0.03% a year — about €3 a year on a €10,000 holding, taken automatically from the fund. As with any investment, its value can go down as well as up, and past performance is not a guide to future results.

Performance

+20.9%
1-year return · USD · as of 2026-06-24
Price return — excludes distributions, so it looks lower than total return. ?

Returns over time

YTD+7.6%
1 year+20.9%
3 years+19.2%
5 years+11.4%

Price history

736.66 USD latest price · end-of-day · 2026-06-24

What your money could grow into

Pick a monthly amount and a number of years to see how regular investing can add up over time. These are your own assumptions — an illustration, not a prediction.

Using iShares Core S&P 500 ETF’s fee. The “assumed yearly return” is just an assumption you can change — not a prediction.

Try:Rough historical ranges — your assumption, not a prediction or advice.
Projected value
You put in
Growth

At year · · you’d have put in , growth added . Drag across the chart (or use ← → keys) to read any year.

Money you added Growth
See the key milestones (every 5 years)
YearPut inGrowthBalance

How this works: an educational scenario, not a forecast. We compound monthly and add your monthly amount each month. “Expected annual return” is your own assumption — pick a cautious one; real markets are bumpy and can fall. “Adjust for inflation” simply restates the result in today’s spending power. The fee figure includes the yearly fund fee (TER) and the growth those fees would otherwise have earned. The fund comparison repeats each fund’s last-12-months return every year — a rough illustration only, which real funds never do. Not advice.

Where it trades

ExchangeTickerCurrency
XETRAIVVUSD★ primary ?

Funds a bit like this one

For comparison only — not a suggestion to switch.

Data as of 2026-06-24 · Source: fh-api

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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.