Expense Ratio

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

The annual fee charged by a mutual fund or ETF, expressed as a percentage of average net assets. Includes management fees, administrative costs, and 12b-1 fees. Automatically deducted from fund returns, reducing net performance.

Example

A fund with a 1.00% expense ratio charges $100 annually per $10,000 invested. On a $50,000 investment, that's $500 per year deducted from returns.

Common Confusion

Expense ratio is NOT a separate bill investors pay; it's automatically deducted from fund returns, reducing the net performance reported to investors.

How This Is Tested

  • Calculating the dollar cost of expense ratios for a specific investment amount
  • Comparing total costs between funds with different expense ratio components
  • Understanding that expense ratios are deducted from returns, not paid separately
  • Identifying which fees are included versus excluded from expense ratios
  • Determining the long-term impact of expense ratio differences on portfolio returns

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Typical actively managed mutual fund expense ratio 0.50% - 1.50% annually Varies by fund type and investment strategy
Typical index fund expense ratio 0.05% - 0.25% annually Lower due to passive management strategy
Maximum 12b-1 fee component (included in expense ratio) 1.00% annually Cannot exceed this limit per SEC regulations

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Jennifer, age 42, is deciding between two S&P 500 index funds for her 401(k). Fund A has an expense ratio of 0.04% with identical index tracking to Fund B, which has an expense ratio of 0.75%. Both funds have matched the S&P 500 return of 10% annually before expenses. Over 20 years, which fund characteristic will have the greatest impact on Jennifer's account value?

Question 2

Which of the following fees are typically included in a mutual fund's expense ratio?

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Question 3

A client invests $200,000 in a mutual fund with the following annual fees: 0.85% management fee, 0.25% 12b-1 fee, and 0.15% administrative costs. What is the total dollar amount deducted from the account annually due to the expense ratio?

Question 4

All of the following statements about expense ratios are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A mutual fund has a total expense ratio of 1.20% annually, consisting of 0.70% management fee, 0.30% in 12b-1 fees, and 0.20% administrative costs. Which of the following statements are accurate?

1. This fund's 12b-1 fee component is within SEC regulatory limits
2. This fund can be marketed as a "no-load" fund
3. Index funds typically have higher expense ratios than this fund
4. An investor with $100,000 in this fund pays $1,200 annually in expenses

💡 Memory Aid

Remember "ER = Expense Ratio = Eating Returns." The expense ratio literally eats into your investment returns every year. Lower is always better because it leaves more money working for you!

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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