Fidelity’s Zero-Fee ETF Is Quietly Keeping Pace With the S&P 500 And Costs Absolutely Nothing

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By Austin Smith Published

Quick Read

  • FZROX returned 18.48% over 1 year and 81.75% over 5 years with a 0.00% expense ratio, vs SPY (17.69%, 75.69%) and VTI (17.67%, 65.3%). Top holdings are Apple (AAPL), Nvidia (NVDA), and Microsoft (MSFT).

  • Fidelity’s zero-fee structure has proven viable over nearly eight years, with FZROX matching or exceeding traditional broad market benchmarks without sacrificing performance.

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Fidelity’s Zero-Fee ETF Is Quietly Keeping Pace With the S&P 500 And Costs Absolutely Nothing

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Expense ratios are small numbers that compound into large differences over decades. A fund charging nothing costs exactly that. FZROX, Fidelity’s Zero Total Market Index Fund, has charged investors 0.00% since its August 2018 launch, and after nearly eight years, the performance record is worth examining seriously.

What FZROX Is Built to Do

FZROX is a broad U.S. equity fund designed to own essentially the entire American stock market, from mega-cap technology giants down through small and micro-cap companies. It tracks Fidelity’s proprietary U.S. Total Investable Market Index, a benchmark Fidelity created specifically to avoid licensing fees from index providers like CRSP or S&P Dow Jones. That is how the zero expense ratio becomes possible.

The return engine is straightforward: you own a slice of American corporate earnings growth. The fund carries no options overlay, no leverage, and no income-enhancement strategy. Information Technology represents 31.8% of holdings, with the top three positions being Apple, Nvidia, and Microsoft. The fund’s dividend yield sits at approximately 1.08%, providing a modest income component alongside capital appreciation.

One structural constraint matters: FZROX is available exclusively through Fidelity accounts and has no ETF share class. You cannot hold it at Schwab, Vanguard, or in a brokerage IRA elsewhere. For investors already inside the Fidelity ecosystem, this is a non-issue. For anyone considering switching custodians, FZROX shares cannot transfer in-kind and would need to be liquidated first, a potential taxable event in non-retirement accounts.

Does the Performance Hold Up?

The numbers tell a competitive story. Over the past year, FZROX returned 18.48%, compared to 17.69% for SPY and 17.67% for VTI. Over five years, FZROX returned 81.75%, modestly ahead of VTI’s 65.3% and SPY’s 75.69%. The five-year comparison uses different start dates, so the gap should be read directionally. What the data confirms is that FZROX has not sacrificed returns to achieve its zero-cost structure.

Three Tradeoffs Worth Knowing

  1. Custodian lock-in: Holding FZROX ties your broad market exposure to staying at Fidelity. Reasonable for most long-term investors, but a real constraint if your financial life moves elsewhere.
  2. Proprietary index risk: FZROX tracks a Fidelity-owned index, not an independent benchmark. Fidelity controls the methodology. In practice this has not mattered, but it is a structural difference from funds tracking CRSP or S&P indices.
  3. Tech concentration: With Information Technology at 31.8% of the portfolio, FZROX’s returns are heavily influenced by a handful of mega-cap names. Investors should not mistake diversification across 1,000+ holdings for protection against a large-cap tech drawdown.

FZROX belongs in the core of a long-term Fidelity account holder’s portfolio as a cost-free foundation for U.S. equity exposure. Anyone who values custodian flexibility or index independence should weigh the lock-in before making it a permanent anchor.

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About the Author Austin Smith →

Austin Smith is a financial publisher with over two decades of experience in the markets. He spent over a decade at The Motley Fool as a senior editor for Fool.com, portfolio advisor for Millionacres, and launched new brands in the personal finance and real estate investing space.

His work has been featured on Fool.com, NPR, CNBC, USA Today, Yahoo Finance, MSN, AOL, Marketwatch, and many other publications. Today he writes for 24/7 Wall St and covers equities, REITs, and ETFs for readers. He is as an advisor to private companies, and co-hosts The AI Investor Podcast.

When not looking for investment opportunities, he can be found skiing, running, or playing soccer with his children. Learn more about me here.

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