average anual rate of return on vanguard mutual funds

The Vanguard Benchmark: Measuring Long-Term Returns Against the Market

I have spent my career analyzing investment performance, and few topics generate more confusion than the “average” rate of return. When clients ask about Vanguard mutual funds, they are often seeking a single, comforting number. My role is to provide clarity, not simplicity. Vanguard is not a monolith; it is a provider of hundreds of distinct funds, each with a unique objective and risk profile. Their returns are not determined by Vanguard, but by the markets they track and the low-cost, disciplined strategy Vanguard employs. Today, I will dissect the performance of Vanguard’s core fund categories, explain the factors driving their returns, and provide you with a realistic framework for setting your own long-term expectations.

The Philosophy Behind the Returns: Indexing and Low Costs

Before discussing numbers, you must understand the Vanguard advantage. Vanguard’s founder, John C. Bogle, championed two revolutionary ideas:

  1. Indexing: Most investors cannot consistently beat the market. Therefore, the most rational strategy is to own the entire market through low-cost index funds, guaranteeing you will receive the market’s return, minus a minimal fee.
  2. Cost Minimization: Vanguard’s unique client-owned structure allows it to operate at cost, continually lowering expense ratios. This cost advantage is the one sure way to improve net returns.

This means the “average” Vanguard fund return is essentially the market return minus a tiny fee. The fund itself does not add or subtract much value; it is a transparent window into the performance of its underlying benchmark.

Deconstructing Performance by Fund Category

There is no single “Vanguard return.” Your experience depends entirely on which market segment you invest in. Let’s examine the long-term performance of Vanguard’s flagship funds, using data as of December 31, 2023. All figures are annualized and include dividend reinvestment, net of fees.

Table 1: Vanguard Fund Performance by Category (10-Year Annualized Returns)

Fund CategoryRepresentative FundTicker~10-Year ReturnPrimary Benchmark
U.S. Total Stock MarketVanguard Total Stock Market Index FundVTSAX~11.8%CRSP US Total Market Index
U.S. Large-Cap (S&P 500)Vanguard 500 Index FundVFIAX~12.0%S&P 500 Index
U.S. Small-CapVanguard Small-Cap Index FundVSMAX~8.5%CRSP US Small Cap Index
International Developed MarketsVanguard Total International Stock Index FundVTIAX~4.3%FTSE Global All Cap ex US Index
Emerging MarketsVanguard Emerging Markets Stock Index FundVEMAX~3.5%FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index
U.S. Total Bond MarketVanguard Total Bond Market Index FundVBTLX~1.3%Bloomberg US Aggregate Float Adjusted Index
Balanced Fund (60/40)Vanguard Balanced Index FundVBIAX~8.0%60% US Stock / 40% US Bond

Source: Vanguard, Morningstar. Returns are approximate and for illustrative purposes. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

The table immediately reveals a critical truth: asset allocation is the primary driver of returns. An investor in VFIAX (S&P 500) experienced significantly higher returns than an investor in VTIAX (International) or VBTLX (Bonds) over this period. This was driven by the exceptional performance of U.S. large-cap technology stocks.

The Power of Cost Savings: A Vanguard Case Study

The real magic of Vanguard is not outperformance, but efficiency. Vanguard funds capture nearly the entire return of their benchmark. Let’s compare a Vanguard fund to a hypothetical average active fund.

Assume a \text{\$100,000} investment over 20 years with a gross market return of 7%.

  • Vanguard S&P 500 Fund (VFIAX): Expense Ratio = 0.04%
    Net Return = 7.00\% - 0.04\% = 6.96\%
\text{FV} = \text{\$100,000} \times (1.0696)^{20} = \text{\$100,000} \times 3.834 \approx \text{\$383,400}

Average Active Fund: Expense Ratio = 0.70%
Net Return = 7.00\% - 0.70\% = 6.30\%

\text{FV} = \text{\$100,000} \times (1.0630)^{20} = \text{\$100,000} \times 3.400 \approx \text{\$340,000}

The Vanguard Advantage: \text{\$383,400} - \text{\$340,000} = \text{\$43,400}

The investor in the Vanguard fund ends up with $43,400 more, not because the fund was smarter, but because it was cheaper. This cost advantage is persistent and predictable.

Setting Realistic Future Expectations

The last decade featured a remarkable bull market. It is dangerous to extrapolate those returns forward. A more conservative and historically grounded expectation for a diversified portfolio is a nominal return of 6-8% for a balanced stock/bond portfolio.

Vanguard itself publishes regular economic and market outlooks. Their forward-looking projections often suggest more modest returns than recent history, given high starting valuations and lower dividend yields.

For planning purposes, I advise clients to use these reasonable assumptions:

  • U.S. Stocks: 6-8% nominal return
  • International Stocks: 7-9% nominal return
  • U.S. Bonds: 4-5% nominal return

These figures are for a balanced portfolio over a full market cycle of 10+ years, not for any single year.

The Most Important Vanguard Return: The One You Actually Earn

There is a crucial distinction between investor return and fund return. A fund can have a stellar 20-year return, but if investors panic-sold during a downturn and bought back in at a peak, their personal return would be much lower.

Vanguard’s structure aids investor returns by discouraging speculation. The lack of sensational performance and the focus on boring, broad-market indexing helps investors stay the course. The real value of a Vanguard fund is that it gives you the highest probability of actually capturing the market’s long-term return through its low costs and its design, which promotes patient, disciplined investing.

My Final Counsel: Focus on Process, Not a Number

Chasing a specific average return is a fool’s errand. The market does not offer guaranteed yields. Instead, focus on the process that Vanguard embodies:

  1. Define Your Asset Allocation: Your risk tolerance and time horizon should determine your mix of stocks and bonds, not past performance.
  2. Minimize Costs: Choose the lowest-cost funds that fulfill your asset allocation. This is the most reliable way to improve your net outcome.
  3. Stay Diversified: Own the entire market—domestic, international, and bonds. You never know which asset class will lead in the next decade.
  4. Invest Consistently: Use dollar-cost averaging to build your positions over time, smoothing out your purchase price.

The “average annual rate of return on Vanguard mutual funds” is the return of the global financial markets, minus a fraction of a percent. By embracing this simple, low-cost, and disciplined approach, you are not betting on a fund manager’s skill. You are making a bet on the long-term growth of global capitalism itself. And history has shown that to be the wisest bet of all.

Scroll to Top