Top 10 REIT ETFs for 2025 - real estate skyline header with investors - Impartoo

Top 10 REIT ETFs

Risk level: 🟡 Moderate — REIT ETFs offer diversified exposure to real estate income and capital appreciation, but they remain sensitive to interest-rate changes, economic cycles, and property-sector performance swings that can amplify volatility relative to broad-market index funds.

At a Glance

  • ETF.com, Morningstar, issuer fact sheets.
  • Funds are ordered by AUM at the time of publication.
  • ETF entries are grouped into Core, Balanced, and High-risk buckets to help you match picks with your goals.

Real Estate Exposure Without the Hassle of Property Ownership

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Why REIT ETFs Belong in Every Investor’s Portfolio

REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) are legally required to pay out most of their income to shareholders, making them a reliable source of dividends. When packaged into ETFs, REITs offer exposure to dozens or even hundreds of real estate holdings, ranging from office parks to apartment complexes to data centers, without the illiquidity or complexity of direct ownership. REIT ETFs can also serve as an effective hedge during inflationary periods and provide diversification away from traditional equities and bonds. To contrast real asset income with other themes, also explore Top 10 Dividend Stocks and Top 10 Value Stocks.

The Top 10 REIT ETFs for 2026

Core (Top 3)
Balanced (4)
High-risk (3)

1. Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ)

VNQ is Vanguard’s flagship real estate ETF. It gives broad, low-cost access to U.S. equity REITs across many property types like industrial, towers, shopping centers, apartments, and storage. For investors who want simple exposure to the whole real estate market in one fund, VNQ is the easy button with deep liquidity and long history.

VNQ tracks the MSCI US Investable Market Real Estate 25/50 index, which captures a wide slice of listed U.S. REITs. It is passive and market-cap weighted, so larger, more established REITs carry more weight. With very large assets and tight spreads, VNQ is often the reference point other REIT ETFs get compared to. It is built as a broad market, multi-cap fund and sits at the center of the category for cost, size, and stability.

VNQ earns a Core spot because it checks the three boxes that matter most for a foundation position: scale, breadth, and cost. It spans 150+ holdings and covers most major REIT subsectors, so you are not betting on a narrow real estate niche. The expense ratio is low for the space, which helps more of the funds’ income and long-term growth show up in your returns.

Growth Catalyst: Real estate cash flows tend to rise with improving occupancy and rent renewals. If rates stabilize or drift lower, REIT valuations and dividend growth can get a tailwind, which benefits a broad, market-cap fund like VNQ.

Stat Nugget: Expense ratio 0.13% with AUM $34.57B and TTM dividend yield 3.82% from the snapshot, this trio of low cost, size, and income is why VNQ is the category anchor.

Looking for another broad, low-cost core building block? See our Top 10 Value ETFs for equity ballast that pairs well with real estate.

MetricValue
Price$92.22
YTD Return+3.57%
Expense Ratio0.13
IssuerVanguard
Index TrackedMSCI US Investable Market Real Estate 25/50
AUM$34.57B
Dividend Yield3.82
StructureETF

We ranked REIT ETFs by verified size and practicality for U.S. investors, then grouped them into Core / Middle / High-Risk buckets. VNQ lands in Core because it is the largest, most liquid, broad-market REIT option with a low fee. Placement reflects our AUM-first rule for ETFs, plus thematic fit and investor usability.

VNQ gives broad, low-cost exposure to U.S. real estate with deep liquidity and diversified property sector coverage, making it a reliable core REIT ETF.

Vanguard VNQ logo for Top REIT ETF 2025 on Impartoo

Price: $92.22

YTD Return: +3.57%

Expense Ratio: 0.13%

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2. Schwab U.S. REIT ETF (SCHH)

SCHH is Schwab’s low-cost way to own a wide basket of U.S. equity REITs. It aims to capture the real estate market’s income and growth without overcomplicating things. For investors who want a set-and-forget option with solid diversification, SCHH delivers broad coverage at a very friendly fee.

The fund tracks the Dow Jones Equity All REIT Capped Index and is passive and market-cap weighted. That means larger, more established REITs naturally carry more weight, which keeps turnover and costs low. With 126 total holdings and deep trading volume, SCHH is a category mainstay that competes directly with the largest broad REIT funds.

SCHH earns a Core slot because it combines broad exposure with one of the lowest fees in real estate ETFs. The mix of liquidity, breadth, and cost efficiency makes it a reliable building block for long-term portfolios that want real estate exposure without complexity.

Growth Catalyst: If financing costs ease and property fundamentals keep improving, REIT cash flows can recover and support higher valuations. A broad, market-cap approach like SCHH is positioned to benefit as sector leadership normalizes across towers, industrial, retail, and residential names.

Stat Nugget: Expense ratio just 0.07% with AUM $8.46B and a TTM dividend yield 3.01% from your snapshot.

MetricValue
Price$21.79
YTD Return+3.49%
Expense Ratio0.07%
IssuerSchwab
Index TrackedDow Jones Equity All REIT Capped
AUM$8.46B
Dividend Yield3.01%
StructureETF

We grouped REIT ETFs into Core / Middle / High-Risk based on real-world usability. SCHH sits in Core thanks to its large asset base, broad index coverage, and ultra-low cost, which aligns with our AUM-first rule and practicality for U.S. investors.

SCHH provides broad, low-fee REIT exposure that’s well suited for long-term investors seeking income and diversification without complexity.

#2 Schwab SCHH logo – REIT ETF 2025 – Impartoo

Price: $21.79

YTD Return: +3.49%

Expense Ratio: 0.07%

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3. Real Estate Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLRE)

XLRE is the SPDR fund that focuses on the real estate slice of the S&P 500. It gives you concentrated exposure to the largest, most established real estate companies in the U.S. The portfolio is compact and liquid, which makes it a straightforward way to hold blue-chip REIT names.

The fund tracks the S&P Real Estate Select Sector Index and is passive and market-cap weighted. With a large-cap tilt and 34 total holdings, it highlights the sector leaders such as towers, industrial, retail, storage, and residential operators. XLRE’s focus on the biggest names helps keep spreads tight and trading smooth for active and long-term investors.

XLRE earns a Core spot because it is the sector standard for large-cap real estate exposure. It pairs deep liquidity with a very competitive fee and a simple, rules-based index. For investors who want the headline names of U.S. real estate in one fund, this is a clean solution.

Growth Catalyst: If earnings stabilize and rate pressures ease, the largest real estate operators can see faster multiple recovery thanks to balance-sheet strength and access to capital. XLRE’s large-cap focus is positioned to benefit from that leadership.

Stat Nugget: Expense ratio 0.08% with AUM $7.97B and TTM dividend yield 3.27% from your snapshot.

Looking to pair large-cap real estate with broader equity exposure? Compare our Top 10 Tech ETFs for a growth counterweight.

MetricValue
Price$41.34
YTD Return+1.65%
Expense Ratio0.09%
IssuerState Street (SPDR)
Index TrackedS&P Real Estate Select Sector Index
AUM$7.41B
Dividend Yield3.35%
StructureETF

We ranked candidates by verified scale and practicality, then placed each fund into Core / Middle / High-Risk buckets. XLRE sits in Core because it combines large assets, a recognizable S&P index, and low costs, which fit our AUM-first rule and real-world usability for U.S. investors.

XLRE focuses on large-cap real estate leaders, offering concentrated, liquid exposure to major REITs with competitive costs.

#3 SPDR XLRE logo – REIT ETF 2025 – Impartoo

Price: $42.56

YTD Return: +4.67%

Expense Ratio: 0.08%

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4. iShares Global REIT ETF (REET)

REET is iShares’ one-ticket way to own listed real estate around the world. It blends U.S. REITs with developed and select international names, so you get property income and growth from many regions in one fund. If you want to diversify beyond the U.S. without juggling multiple tickers, REET keeps it simple.

The fund tracks the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Global REIT Index and is passive and market-cap weighted. With 358 total holdings, it spreads risk across large, mid, and smaller real estate companies while keeping costs in check. The global mix introduces currency and country effects, which can help offset U.S. cycle swings over time.

REET earns a Middle slot because it adds international breadth while staying cost-efficient and liquid. It is a practical way to balance a U.S. core with global exposure, which can smooth returns across different rate paths and economic cycles.

Growth Catalyst: As global rates stabilize, improving rent rolls and asset values can support dividend recovery outside the U.S., giving a diversified tailwind to a worldwide basket like REET.

Stat Nugget: Expense ratio 0.14% with AUM $4.05B, TTM dividend yield 3.68%, and 358 holdings per your snapshot.

MetricValue
Price$25.82
YTD Return+7.70%
Expense Ratio0.14%
IssuerBlackRock (iShares)
Index TrackedFTSE EPRA/NAREIT Global REIT Index
AUM$4.05B
Dividend Yield3.68%
StructureETF

We rank by scale and practicality first, then assign Core / Middle / High-Risk. REET sits in Middle because it offers broad, global diversification at a low fee and sizeable assets, but with added currency and regional variability versus U.S.-only core funds.

REET expands your REIT exposure globally, blending U.S. and international property markets for broader diversification.

#4 iShares REET logo – REIT ETF 2025 – Impartoo

Price: $25.82

YTD Return: +7.70%

Expense Ratio: 0.14%

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5. iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF (IYR)

IYR is iShares’ broad U.S. real estate ETF. It gives one-ticker access to many property types, including towers, industrial, retail, storage, and residential. Investors use IYR to add real estate income and diversification without picking individual REITs.

The fund tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate index and is passive and market-cap weighted. With 66 total holdings, it tilts toward larger, seasoned operators while still covering a wide mix of subsectors. Liquidity is strong and the fund has a long operating history, which keeps it relevant alongside other broad REIT choices.

IYR earns a Middle slot because it offers diversified exposure with deep trading volume and a familiar benchmark. It is practical for long-term investors who want a straightforward real estate sleeve inside a core equity allocation. The expense is higher than the ultra-low-fee options, so we place it just below the Core choices.

Growth Catalyst: Real estate earnings can improve as rent renewals and occupancy trends stabilize, especially if financing costs ease. A diversified, market-cap fund like IYR can capture that recovery across multiple property types.

Stat Nugget: From your snapshot, AUM $3.72B, expense ratio 0.38%, and TTM dividend yield 2.31% with 66 holdings.

Want a broad equity partner to sit next to real estate? See our Top 10 Total Market ETFs for simple market-wide exposure.

MetricValue
Price$97.98
YTD Return+5.31%
Expense Ratio0.38%
IssuerBlackRock (iShares)
Index TrackedDow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index
AUM$3.72B
Dividend Yield2.31%
StructureETF

We rank by real-world usability and verified size, then group into Core / Middle / High-Risk. IYR sits in Middle because it is diversified and liquid, yet not as cost-efficient as the Core leaders. The placement reflects our AUM-first rule with a practicality check for U.S. investors.

IYR delivers diversified U.S. real estate exposure with strong liquidity and a familiar benchmark, making it a practical choice for long-term investors.

#5 iShares IYR logo – REIT ETF 2025 – Impartoo

Price: $97.98

YTD Return: +5.31%

Expense Ratio: 0.38%

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6. SPDR DJ Wilshire REIT ETF (RWR)

RWR is State Street’s broad U.S. equity REIT fund. It holds a wide mix of real estate operators across property types like industrial, towers, retail, storage, and residential. The goal is simple diversified REIT exposure in a low-maintenance, index-tracking package.

RWR tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Select REIT Index and is passive and market-cap weighted. With 105 total holdings, it tilts toward larger, seasoned REITs while still spreading risk across many names. Liquidity and history make it a durable option for investors who want broad real estate exposure without stock picking.

RWR earns a Middle slot because it blends solid diversification with a competitive fee and a well-known benchmark. It is practical for long-term investors who want a straightforward real estate position that can complement core equity holdings.

Growth Catalyst: If financing costs stabilize and leasing trends keep improving, REIT cash flows can recover and support higher dividends. A diversified index like RWR can capture that improvement across leading property types.

Stat Nugget: Snapshot shows expense ratio 0.25%, AUM $1.76B, TTM dividend yield 3.88%, and 105 holdings.

MetricValue
Price$101.60
YTD Return+2.77%
Expense Ratio0.25%
IssuerState Street (SPDR)
Index TrackedDow Jones U.S. Select REIT Index
AUM$1.76B
Dividend Yield3.88%
StructureETF

We ranked by real-world usability and verified size, then assigned Core / Middle / High-Risk. RWR sits in Middle because it offers broad coverage and scale, but its fee is higher than the very lowest-cost core leaders. The placement reflects our AUM-first rule plus practicality for U.S. investors.

RWR offers broad U.S. REIT exposure with a wide mix of property types, balancing diversification and real estate market representation.

#6 SPDR RWR logo – REIT ETF 2025 – Impartoo

Price: $101.60

YTD Return: +2.77%

Expense Ratio: 0.25%

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7. Fidelity MSCI Real Estate Index ETF (FREL)

FREL is Fidelity’s low-cost, broad U.S. real estate ETF. It holds a wide mix of REITs across property types such as industrial, towers, shopping centers, apartments, and storage. The design is simple, aiming to deliver diversified real estate income and long-term growth without extra complexity.

The fund tracks the MSCI USA IMI Real Estate 25/50 Index and is passive and market-cap weighted. With 143 total holdings, it spreads risk across large, mid, and smaller companies while keeping turnover and trading costs modest. The combination of broad coverage and a very competitive fee makes FREL a practical alternative to the biggest category incumbents.

FREL earns a Middle slot because it mixes strong diversification with a rock-bottom expense ratio. It is useful for investors who want broad real estate exposure and prefer Fidelity’s ecosystem while keeping costs near the low end of the category. The AUM is smaller than Core peers, so we place it in the Middle bucket.

Growth Catalyst: If rent renewals and occupancy hold up while financing costs stabilize, diversified REIT baskets can see steadier cash flows and dividend recovery. FREL’s wide property mix is positioned to participate across multiple subsectors.

Stat Nugget: From your snapshot: expense ratio 0.08%, AUM $1.09B, TTM dividend yield 3.47%, with 143 holdings.

MetricValue
Price$28.01
YTD Return+3.68%
Expense Ratio0.08%
IssuerFidelity
Index TrackedMSCI USA IMI Real Estate 25/25 Index
AUM$1.09B
Dividend Yield3.47%
StructureETF

We rank by verified size and practicality for U.S. investors, then assign Core / Middle / High-Risk. FREL sits in Middle due to its smaller asset base versus the Core leaders, but its broad index and ultra-low fee support inclusion for diversified exposure.

FREL provides a low-cost way to hold a broad U.S. real estate portfolio, appealing to investors seeking diversified REIT income and growth.

#7 Fidelity FREL logo – REIT ETF 2025 – Impartoo

Price: $28.01

YTD Return: +3.68%

Expense Ratio: 0.08%

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8. IXG – JPMorgan BetaBuilders MSCI U.S. REIT ETF (BBRE)

BBRE is JPMorgan’s rules-based take on U.S. equity REITs. The fund targets a wide mix of property types, including industrial, towers, retail, storage, and residential, and packages them in a single, tradable fund. It is designed for investors who want a modern, low-fee approach from a different issuer than the traditional leaders.

BBRE tracks the MSCI US REIT Custom Capped Index and is passive and market-cap weighted. With 122 total holdings, it spreads exposure across large and mid-cap real estate operators while keeping turnover modest. Liquidity is solid, and the fee is competitive, which helps it stand out among second-tier options.

BBRE lands in the High-risk bucket because its asset base is smaller than the Core and Middle funds, and it may carry higher trading variability during stressed markets. That said, the combination of diversified exposure and a lean fee schedule makes it a credible alternative for investors who want to venture beyond the biggest issuers. The fund’s index design keeps it simple and keeps costs in check.

Growth Catalyst: If financing conditions stabilize and fundamentals improve across industrial and data-heavy property types, diversified REIT baskets with meaningful exposure to these segments can see cash-flow resilience. BBRE’s broad mix is positioned to participate as these categories regain momentum.

Stat Nugget: From your snapshot, expense ratio 0.11%, AUM $962.67M, and TTM dividend yield 3.01% across 122 holdings.

MetricValue
Price$96.51
YTD Return+3.06%
Expense Ratio0.11%
IssuerJPMorgan
Index TrackedMSCI US REIT Custom Capped Index
AUM$962.67M
Dividend Yield3.01%
StructureETF

We rank by verified size and practicality for U.S. investors, then assign Core / Middle / High-risk. BBRE is labeled High-risk due to its smaller AUM relative to the category leaders, even though its fee is attractive and coverage is broad. The placement reflects our AUM-first rule with a realism check on scale and staying power.

BBRE delivers broad U.S. REIT exposure with a simple index approach, making it a solid satellite to complement core real estate holdings.

#8 JPMorgan BBRE logo – REIT ETF 2025 – Impartoo

Price: $96.51

YTD Return: +3.06%

Expense Ratio: 0.11%

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9. Pacer Data & Infrastructure Real Estate ETF (SRVR)

SRVR focuses on the digital backbone of real estate. It owns companies tied to data centers, cell towers, and mission-critical infrastructure that keep cloud computing and mobile networks running. Investors use SRVR when they want a targeted way to tap growth in data usage rather than a broad real estate fund.

The fund tracks the Solactive GPR Data & Infrastructure Index and is passive and market-cap weighted. With 22 total holdings, it is concentrated in a small group of communications and technology-linked property operators. That focus can lift returns when the data economy expands, yet it also increases day-to-day volatility compared with broad REIT baskets.

SRVR earns a High-risk slot because of its narrow industry focus and smaller asset base. It can add punch to a diversified lineup when towers and data centers lead the sector. The trade-off is higher sensitivity to growth expectations and capex cycles in digital infrastructure.

Growth Catalyst: Continued growth in AI workloads, cloud adoption, and 5G densification can drive long-term demand for high-quality data centers and tower space, supporting rents and pricing power for SRVR’s holdings.

Stat Nugget: Snapshot shows AUM $431.71M, expense ratio 0.49%, TTM dividend yield 1.18%, and 22 holdings.

Explore more innovation-tilted exposure in our Top 10 AI & Robotics ETFs.

MetricValue
Price$21.52
YTD Return+0.80%
Expense Ratio0.48%
IssuerBlackRock (iShares)
Index TrackedFTSE NAREIT All Mortgage Capped Index
AUM$555.68M
Dividend Yield9.59%
StructureETF

We ranked candidates by verified size and practicality for U.S. investors, then grouped them into Core / Middle / High-risk. SRVR sits in High-risk because it is a niche strategy with fewer holdings and a smaller asset base. It complements the broad funds in the Core and Middle buckets by targeting a specific growth theme inside real estate.

SRVR targets data and infrastructure real estate niches, offering thematic exposure with higher potential growth and volatility.

SRVR logo — Pacer Data and Infrastructure Real Estate ETF featured in Impartoo’s Top 10 Financial ETFs for 2025

Price: $21.52

YTD Return: +0.80%

Expense Ratio: 0.48%

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10. iShares Mortgage Real Estate ETF (REM)

REM concentrates on mortgage REITs (mREITs), companies that own or originate mortgage assets and earn spread income. This is a very different engine than equity REITs that own properties. Investors use REM when they want higher income potential from the mortgage market, knowing that payouts and prices can swing with funding costs and credit conditions.

The fund tracks the FTSE Nareit All Mortgage Capped Index and is passive and market-cap weighted. With 36 total holdings, REM is focused and tilted to the largest agency and non-agency mREIT operators. Because mREITs finance portfolios with short-term borrowing, the group is more sensitive to interest-rate moves and liquidity than property-owning REITs.

REM earns a High-risk slot because of its concentrated exposure to mortgage REITs and the mechanics of leveraged spread investing. It can deliver substantial income when funding markets are calm and yield curves stabilize. The trade-off is higher volatility, dividend variability, and more cyclicality than broad real estate funds.

Growth Catalyst: If short-term rates ease and funding spreads normalize, book values for agency mREITs can recover and dividend stability can improve, tailwinds for a mortgage-focused basket like REM.

Stat Nugget: From your snapshot: AUM $598M, expense ratio 0.48%, TTM dividend yield 8.93%, and 36 holdings.

MetricValue
Price$22.24
YTD Return+4.19%
Expense Ratio0.48%
IssuerBlackRock (iShares)
Index TrackedFTSE Nareit All Mortgage Capped
AUM$598.03M
Dividend Yield8.93%
StructureETF

We ranked candidates by verified scale and practicality, then assigned Core / Middle / High-risk. REM sits in High-risk because the mREIT segment is more rate and funding sensitive and the asset base is smaller than broad REIT leaders. It remains a useful satellite for investors seeking income with eyes open to the added volatility.

REM focuses on mortgage-REIT segments, which can boost income but comes with added sensitivity to interest rates and funding costs.

REM logo — iShares Mortgage Real Estate ETF featured in Impartoo’s Top 10 Financial ETFs for 2025

Price: $22.24

YTD Return: +4.19%

Expense Ratio: 0.48%

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5 quick questions • 60 seconds

How to Use This List

Set your goal: Determine whether you’re aiming for steady income, inflation hedging, or long-term capital growth via real estate exposure.

Pick your flavor: Broad U.S. equity REIT ETFs, mortgage REIT ETFs, or global/sector-tilted REITs each carry different risk/income profiles.

Build in layers: Use a core broad REIT ETF, then tilt with specialty ones (mortgage REITs or global) to enhance yield or diversify by geography.

Read the key metrics: Focus on expense ratio, dividend yield, AUM, tracking error, and fund structure (equity vs mortgage REITs).

Set a review rhythm: Monitor rate changes, real estate cycles, macro trends, and yield spreads. Rebalance when one REIT niche overtakes your intended mix. If you prefer sector or stock tilts, check out Top 10 REIT Stocks and broader exposure via Top 10 Total Market ETFs.

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How We Chose These ETFs

We selected these REIT ETFs based on the following criteria:

  • Assets Under Management (AUM): All funds have strong liquidity and scale.
  • Theme Fit: Each ETF delivers targeted exposure to real estate, including U.S. core REITs, global REITs, and mortgage REITs.
  • Dividend Yield: Most funds yield 3–4%, with some higher-yield mortgage options included.
  • Expense Ratio: All ETFs on this list charge 0.48% or less in annual fees.
  • Structure & Strategy: Includes passive index funds, low-cost providers, and one actively managed strategy for tactical exposure.

Sources include: Finviz, ETF.com, CFRA, Morningstar, Bloomberg, and official issuer documentation from Vanguard, Schwab, BlackRock, and others. Our filtering and vetting are aligned with how we build Top 10 Financial ETFs and reflect patterns similar to Top 10 Clean Energy ETFs.

This overview explains the criteria specific to this list. For a detailed explanation of how Impartoo’s Top 10 lists are researched, curated, and reviewed across all categories, see our Methodology.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is an expense ratio?
What: The annual fee the ETF charges, shown as a percentage.
How: It’s deducted from returns over time.
Why: Lower fees help more of your returns stay invested.

What is dividend yield?
What: The income paid by the fund relative to its share price.
How: It often comes from the dividends REITs pay out to shareholders.
Why: Yield is a main attraction of REIT ETFs for income investors.

What is AUM (Assets Under Management)?
What: The total dollar value of assets invested in the ETF.
How: Reported by the issuer and updated frequently.
Why: Bigger funds usually have better liquidity and tighter spreads.

What is tracking error?
What: The gap between ETF performance and its benchmark index.
How: Measured as the volatility of the difference in returns.
Why: Lower tracking error means you’re getting clean exposure after fees.

What is a REIT ETF?
What: A fund that invests in real estate investment trusts (REITs).
How: By owning many REIT holdings, the ETF gives you broad real estate exposure.
Why: It’s a way to access real estate without owning physical property.

How do REIT ETFs generate income?
What: Through dividend distributions from the underlying REITs.
How: REITs legally must distribute most of their taxable income to shareholders.
Why: That makes REIT ETFs attractive to income-focused investors.

What risks come with REIT ETFs?
What: Risks include interest rate hikes, real estate market cycles, property valuations, and fund concentration.
How: Higher rates can reduce REIT valuations; property downturns can dent dividends.
Why: Being aware of risks helps set realistic return expectations.

How do I pick the right REIT ETF?
What: Compare yield, fee, liquidity, geographic exposure, and REIT subtype (equity vs mortgage).
How: Match the ETF’s profile with your income need, growth view, and risk tolerance.
Why: The “right” REIT ETF aligns with what you want from your portfolio.

Can REIT ETFs be held in retirement accounts?
What: Yes, most IRAs, 401(k)s, and brokerage retirement accounts allow REIT ETFs.
How: Buy them via your usual ETF interface.
Why: Because REIT dividends can be taxed, holding them in tax-advantaged accounts is often smarter.

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Final Thoughts on REIT ETF Investing

REIT ETFs can play a crucial role in any long-term portfolio, especially for investors seeking yield, diversification, or protection against inflation. In today’s market, many of the largest REIT ETFs offer compelling value due to rate-driven price adjustments, making this a strong entry point for long-term investors. Whether you’re looking for domestic stability, global exposure, or high-yield niche plays, these 10 funds provide a well-rounded snapshot of the real estate investment landscape. REIT ETFs can improve yield and diversification, and pairing them with stable holdings like Top 10 Defensive Stocks or growth exposure from Top 10 Technology Stocks can smooth returns.

Explore More ETF Strategies

To widen your thematic toolkit, also browse Top 10 Clean Energy ETFs , Top 10 AI & Robotics ETFs, and Top 10 ESG ETFs. Looking to round out your portfolio beyond REITs? Check out our other Top 10 ETF lists covering dividend yield, innovation, small-cap opportunities, and more. Each one is hand-curated with clarity, performance, and your investing goals in mind.

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Looking to diversify your portfolio with real estate, without managing tenants or buildings? These 10 REIT ETFs offer powerful exposure to commercial, residential, and global real estate markets, all through the convenience of a single fund. This Top 10 REIT ETFs list is a simple guide that compares dividend yield, fees, and AUM so everyday investors can see the key differences quickly. To see all of the themes and categories we track, visit our Top 10 Rankings hub.