These Are the 5 Top-Performing Vanguard ETFs of 2024. Which Ones Are Still Buys?

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Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have become a popular investing instrument over the last few years. They provide easy and instant access to diversified holdings, they're easy to buy and sell on the market, and they usually have low fees.

Vanguard has become a top player because all of its ETFs track indexes and are passively managed, it has a solid track record of reliability, and it has a low expense ratio. It offers more than 80 different ETFs for all kinds of investors: growth, value, dividend, high risk, low risk, and more.

These are the five best-performing Vanguard ETFs of 2024. Let's go through each one and see if you should buy it today.

1. Vanguard S&P 500 Growth ETF: Up 41%

The Vanguard S&P 500 Growth ETF (NYSEMKT: VOOG) follows the S&P 500 Growth Index, which is made up of the 230 or so growth stocks in the S&P 500. That's less diversification than the benchmark index, but it's still a fair amount of stocks. It has an expense ratio of 0.1%, as compared with an average of 0.95% for similar ETFs.

Since it's a weighted index, its largest stocks, Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia, alone make up more than a quarter of the whole portfolio. On the one hand, that increases the risk, but on the other hand, it gives investors more exposure to tech trends, especially artificial intelligence (AI).

Even though it's the top-performing ETF right now, it doesn't have the highest risk rating. It has a mark of 4 with 5 being the highest. It also has the second-highest annualized return since inception, in 2007, of 16.4%. That should give investors confidence that this isn't a risky play.

It's well-positioned to continue soaring in 2025 as AI is still a growth driver, and it looks like an excellent choice for any investor except the most risk averse.

2. Vanguard Communication Services ETF: Up 38.9%

The Vanguard Communication Services ETF (NYSEMKT: VOX) tracks the MSCI US Investable Market Communication Services 25/50 Index. It has about 118 stocks, making it one of the least diversified Vanguard ETFs. It has an expense ratio of 0.1% vs. 0.85% for similar ETFs. It hasn't been one of Vanguard's best-performing ETFs over the long term, with an annualized gain of 8.4% since 2004. That's below the S&P 500.

Meta Platforms and Alphabet make up more than 30% of the total. It also has the highest risk rating. However, it has performed very well this year due to tailwinds benefiting the communications industry.

This could be an option for investors who have an appetite for risk, and it has continued tailwinds going into 2025. But I would faster choose a more fully diversified, growth-oriented ETF that presents potential for high gains with more security.