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Mutual Funds vs. ETFs — Which Should I Choose?

Both mutual funds and ETFs let you invest in many stocks at once — but they work differently and suit different investors. Here are the differences you need to know.
📅 29. April 2026 👁️ 6 views 📂 Grunnleggende 🇳🇴 Les på norsk

You have decided to invest in funds. Then you discover there are two types that look suspiciously similar: mutual funds and ETFs. Both spread risk across many stocks, both can track an index — but they are not the same.

Here we go through the differences, the similarities, and when you should choose which.

What is a mutual fund?

A traditional mutual fund pools money from many investors and places it in stocks. You buy and sell units directly from the fund company — typically once per day, at the day is NAV price (net asset value). The minimum investment is often low, typically 100–500 kroner, and monthly savings plans are easy to set up.

What is an ETF?

ETF stands for Exchange-Traded Fund. An ETF works like a mutual fund, but is traded on the stock exchange just like an ordinary share. You can buy and sell it at any time during the trading day at market price — not just once per day.

Short version: Mutual funds are bought from the fund company. ETFs are bought on the stock exchange via a broker — just like a share.

Similarities

The most important differences

Mutual fund ETF
TradingOnce per dayContinuously on the exchange
Minimum purchaseOften 100–500 krOne unit (can be expensive)
Brokerage feeNoneYes, per trade
Monthly savingSimple and automaticRequires more manual effort
SpreadNoneSmall difference between buy/sell price
CostsOften slightly higherOften slightly lower

Costs — who wins?

ETFs generally have slightly lower management fees than comparable mutual funds. But ETFs cost brokerage fees every time you trade — something mutual funds rarely do. For someone investing monthly with small amounts, brokerage costs can quickly eat up the cost advantage.

Example: You invest 500 kroner per month. ETF brokerage is 29 kroner per trade. That is 5.8% in transaction costs — far more than the difference in management fees.

Tax and ASK

Both mutual funds and ETFs can be held in a share savings account (ASK), which provides tax advantages. You do not pay tax on gains until you withdraw money from the account — and you can switch between funds and ETFs within the ASK without triggering tax.

Tip: Always use an ASK account when investing in mutual funds or ETFs to defer tax for as long as possible.

When should you choose a mutual fund?

When should you choose an ETF?

What do most Norwegians choose?

For the vast majority of Norwegian savers investing monthly via automatic transfers, a traditional index fund is the simplest and most cost-effective choice. Platforms such as Nordnet and DNB offer monthly savings in index funds without brokerage fees — making it hard for ETFs to compete on cost for small savers.

"I am divinely led, I follow the right fork in the road, God makes a way where there is no way."
— Florence Scovel Shinn
Rule of thumb: For monthly small savings — choose an index fund. For larger lump sums with flexibility — consider an ETF. Both are good choices compared to not investing at all.

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