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How Investment Fees Erode Canadian Returns

How MERs and fund fees compound over time to reduce Canadian investment growth, with comparisons between index ETFs and mutual funds.

Verified against Canadian Securities Administrators - Investment Fund Costs on 28 Feb 2026 Updated 28 February 2026 4 min read
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Summary

Canadian investment fees, expressed as the Management Expense Ratio (MER), are among the highest in the developed world. The average Canadian equity mutual fund charges an MER of 1.80%-2.20%, while index ETFs charge 0.05%-0.25%. Over 30 years, this difference can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost compound growth. Whether held in a TFSA, RRSP, or non-registered account, fees reduce returns identically.

How it works

MER (Management Expense Ratio)

The MER is the annual percentage of your portfolio taken by the fund for management, administration, and trailing commissions. It is deducted daily from the fund’s net asset value, so you never see a line-item charge; your fund simply grows less than the market.

Typical Canadian fund fees

Fund typeTypical MERExamples
Canadian equity ETF0.05% - 0.10%iShares S&P/TSX 60 (XIU, 0.18%), Vanguard FTSE Canada (VCN, 0.05%)
Global equity ETF0.20% - 0.25%Vanguard FTSE Global All Cap (VXC, 0.21%), iShares MSCI World (XWD, 0.47%)
Bank mutual fund1.80% - 2.20%RBC Canadian Equity (2.05%), TD Canadian Index-e (0.33%)
Robo-advisor0.40% - 0.70%Wealthsimple (0.50% + fund MER), Questwealth (0.25% + fund MER)

Why Canadian fees are higher

Canada has historically had higher fund fees than the US, UK, and Australia due to:

  • Trailing commissions embedded in mutual fund MERs (1.00% paid to the advisor’s dealer)
  • Big-5 bank dominance in fund distribution with limited fee competition
  • Smaller fund market relative to the US, reducing economies of scale

The Canadian Securities Administrators banned deferred sales charges (DSCs) in 2022, but trailing commissions remain standard in mutual fund MERs.

The formula

Each month: balance = previous balance x (1 + (gross return - MER) / 12) + contribution

The fee reduces every month’s growth, not just an annual deduction. Over decades, this creates an exponential gap between low-fee and high-fee portfolios.

Worked example

C$25,000 initial + C$500/month, 7% gross return, 30 years:

  1. Total contributions: C$25,000 + (C$500 x 12 x 30) = C$205,000
  2. With 0.20% MER (index ETF): Net return 6.80%, final value = C$703,421
  3. With 2.00% MER (bank mutual fund): Net return 5.00%, final value = C$478,674
  4. Cost of the 1.80% fee difference: C$703,421 - C$478,674 = C$224,747
  5. The higher fee consumed 32% of what the low-fee portfolio earned
  6. To match the ETF outcome, the mutual fund investor would need to save an extra C$313/month

Key differences from other markets

  • Canadian MERs are significantly higher than global peers. The average Canadian equity mutual fund MER of ~2.00% compares to ~0.50%-0.75% in the US, ~0.60%-1.00% in the UK, and ~0.70% in Australia. This is primarily due to trailing commissions embedded in Canadian fund MERs.
  • TFSA and RRSP do not shield you from fees. While these accounts eliminate tax drag, the MER is deducted regardless of account type. A Canadian holding a 2.00% MER fund in their TFSA loses the same percentage to fees as in a non-registered account. Low-cost ETFs inside a TFSA provide the maximum compounding benefit.

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