You decided to invest in an ETF, and already picked the one you want. You open your brokerage account, look for it, and all of a sudden the confusion hits you.
Whether you chose the S&P 500, Nasdaq-100, or a totally different ETF – once you search for it you’ll see a bunch of different versions of the same ETF with either (acc) and (dist) behind them.
So what now?
Are they the same thing? Are they something different? Which one should you choose?
ETF (acc) vs (dist)
The difference between an accumulating and a distributing ETF is pretty simple.
If you invest in an accumulating ETF – dividends are automatically reinvested. So no dividend cash payouts – it compounds within the ETF.
If you invest in a distributing ETF, you get the opposite. Meaning dividends are paid out to you in cash.
Note that tax treatment varies by country.
Which one should you choose?
If you want capital growth/long term compounding, the accumulating ETF is the way to go.
If you want income, the distributing ETF is the better choice.
Why prices are different
Another thing you’ll notice is that there are multiple versions of the same ETF with different prices.
That is due to different ETF providers and share sizes/splits. But it has nothing to do with performance. You could compare it to cutting a pizza in either 8 slices or 4 – either way, it’s still the same pizza.
Most common providers include:
- iShares
- Vanguard
- Xtrackers
Cost
ETFs also have different yearly costs. Usually shown as the TER, total expense ratio or annual costs.
One Nasdaq-100 (acc) ETF might have an annual cost of 0.20%.
Another Nasdaq-100 (acc) ETF might cost 0.30% annually.
Not a huge difference, but it matters long term.
So lower is usually better.
Conclusion
If you want compounding -> acc
If you want payouts -> dist
Then choose the lowest annual cost version of that.
Both versions track the same underlying assets – the only difference is how dividends are handled.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.



