The Vanguard S&P 500 Growth ETF (NYSEMKT:VOOG) and the Vanguard Russell 1000 Growth ETF (NASDAQ:VONG) both deliver low-cost U.S. growth stock exposure, but they track different indexes and thus offer distinct portfolio compositions.
This comparison looks at fees, performance, portfolio tilt, and practical considerations to help clarify which approach may appeal more.
|
Metric |
VOOG |
VONG |
|---|---|---|
|
Issuer |
Vanguard |
Vanguard |
|
Expense ratio |
0.07% |
0.06% |
|
1-yr return (as of March 2, 2026) |
18.47% |
14.53% |
|
Dividend yield |
0.49% |
0.46% |
|
Beta (5Y monthly) |
1.10 |
1.15 |
|
AUM |
$22.5 billion |
$46.5 billion |
Beta measures price volatility relative to the S&P 500. The 1-yr return represents total return over the trailing 12 months.
VONG is slightly more affordable with a lower annual expense ratio, though the difference is minimal. The funds pay a nearly identical dividend yield, so cost and income factors are essentially a wash.
|
Metric |
VOOG |
VONG |
|---|---|---|
|
Max drawdown (5 y) |
-32.74% |
-32.72% |
|
Growth of $1,000 over 5 years |
$1,863 |
$1,867 |
VONG tracks the Russell 1000 Growth Index, holding 391 stocks and offering a diversified take on large-cap U.S. growth. Its portfolio is led by technology (50%), but it also features meaningful allocations to consumer cyclical (14%) and communication services (13%).
Its top holdings include Nvidia, Apple, and Microsoft, and the fund has a 15-year track record and no unusual quirks.
VOOG, on the other hand, draws from the S&P 500 Growth Index and holds only 140 stocks, resulting in a more concentrated approach. Its sector mix also leans into technology at 48%, with 18% allocated to communication services and 10% to consumer cyclical. The top three positions include Nvidia, Microsoft, and Alphabet.
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VOOG and VONG are similar in many ways, namely in that they both focus on large-cap growth stocks. Their differing underlying indexes, though, result in a few key distinctions.
For one, VOOG is narrower, with 251 fewer stocks than VONG. The ETFs also have marginal differences in sector and stock allocations, with communication services making up a slightly larger slice of VOOG’s portfolio, and VONG leaning more heavily into consumer cyclical stocks.
While Nvidia and Microsoft are in both funds’ top three holdings, VOOG invests more heavily in Alphabet while VONG tilts toward Apple. Although these are all marginal differences, they could impact performance if these particular stocks or sectors under- or overperform.