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What is an index, and why do so many ETFs just track one?

An index is just a published list — like ‘the 500 biggest US companies’. Many ETFs simply copy that list.

ETFs and the indexes they track
882 ETFs Data as of 2026-05-31 · Source: iShares issuer data
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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.

👉 Change the numbers above — it’s your money, your assumptions.

Tracking, not guessing

An index is a transparent set of rules — for example, ‘hold the 500 largest US companies, weighted by size’. An index ETF just follows that recipe. The way it copies the list is called its How the fund copies its index: by buying the shares directly (physical) or using a swap contract (synthetic). More → : it can buy the actual shares, or use other methods to mirror the result.

Copying a list is cheap, so the The yearly running cost of the fund, shown as a % of your money. €0.20 per €100 a year at 0.20%. Lower is cheaper. More → is low. It is transparent — you can see exactly what you own. And it does not depend on a star manager being right. None of this guarantees a profit, and markets still go down as well as up. But for broad, long-term exposure, low-cost index ETFs are why ‘boring’ has become so popular.

🤔 An index ETF tries to…

Common questions

Does tracking mean I always match the index exactly?
Almost, but not perfectly. Small differences (called tracking difference) come from fees and how the fund copies the index. For big, liquid indexes it is usually very small.
Is index investing guaranteed to win?
No. It is low-cost and broad, but it follows the market down as well as up. Nothing here is a promise of returns — it is education only.