The Case for Holding VYM in Your Roth IRA

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By Danielle Liverance Published

Quick Read

  • VYM's $1,650 annual tax bite on a $500,000 position compounds into roughly $16,500 of income drag over 10 years in a taxable account.

  • Top-bracket investors face up to 23.8% on qualified dividends, sending nearly a quarter of every VYM distribution to the Treasury instead of compounding.

  • Place BDCs and mortgage REITs in your Roth first, but VYM's quarterly compounding drag and capital gains pass-throughs still make it a strong second-priority candidate.

  • Don't wait: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just revealed his top 10 AI stocks. See the full list FREE now.

The Case for Holding VYM in Your Roth IRA

© Money and nest eggs concept for retirement, savings, and financial planning (Shutterstock.com) by Jason York

If you hold Vanguard High Dividend Yield Index Fund ETF Shares (NYSEARCA:VYM) in a taxable brokerage account, every December distribution check comes with an IRS partner. At the 24% federal bracket, a portfolio throwing off $20,000 in dividends hands over $4,800 a year to Washington, every year, forever. The Roth IRA is the only legal way to stop that bleed without selling.

Here is the wrinkle most VYM articles skip: VYM is not the textbook Roth candidate. The framework prioritizes ordinary-income payers (BDCs, mortgage REITs, MLPs) because their distributions get taxed as regular income. VYM’s distributions are predominantly qualified dividends, which already enjoy preferential long-term capital gains rates. That changes the math, but it does not eliminate the Roth advantage. Let me walk through what I am seeing.

The Tax Delta: VYM in a Roth vs. a Taxable Account

VYM tracks the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index at a paper-thin expense ratio of 0.04% (technically 0.0004 in decimal form). The fund closed at $160.46 on June 15, 2026. Recent quarterly distributions: $0.8617 in March 2026, $0.9474 in December 2025, $0.8417 in September 2025, and $0.8617 in June 2025. That is a trailing four-quarter payout in the mid-$3 range per share.

Apply that to a $500,000 VYM position. The dividend stream lands in your account regardless of where the shares sit. The difference is what happens next:

  • Inside a Roth IRA: 100% of distributions stay yours. Reinvest them, spend them, ignore them. No 1099-DIV. No tax friction on compounding.
  • Inside a taxable account: Qualified dividends at the 24% ordinary bracket typically fall into the 15% long-term capital gains rate. On roughly $11,000 of annual VYM income, that is around $1,650 surrendered every year.

Over ten years, that is roughly $16,500 of income drag, before counting reinvestment compounding. VYM’s tax cost is smaller than a BDC’s because qualified treatment cushions the blow, but it is not zero.

The Bracket Multiplier

The qualified-dividend rate schedule is what makes VYM placement different. Per the 2026 federal marginal brackets, here is how the same VYM income stream gets treated:

  • 22% ordinary bracket: Qualified dividends typically taxed at 15%.
  • 24% ordinary bracket: Qualified dividends typically taxed at 15%.
  • 32% ordinary bracket: Still 15% on most qualified dividends.
  • 37% ordinary bracket: Qualified dividends taxed at 20%, plus the 3.8% net investment income tax on high earners.

For a 37% bracket household, the all-in qualified-dividend rate can reach 23.8%. That converts the Roth advantage on VYM from a nuisance into a real number. A reader at this bracket holding VYM in a brokerage is sending nearly a quarter of the distribution to the Treasury.

The Insight Most Readers Miss

I have been watching dividend ETFs in client conversations for years now, and the part people undercount is the compounding tax drag. VYM has delivered a 209% ten-year total return through June 15, 2026, and the dividends got reinvested along the way. Every dollar of tax paid in year one is a dollar that did not buy shares, did not earn dividends, did not buy more shares. The Roth eliminates that drag on every reinvestment, four times a year, for the life of the account. Suze Orman frames it cleanly: “In a Roth, you would let it accumulate for all 10 years and grow and grow and grow. Because when you take it out, it’s all going to be tax free.”

What to Do

Three concrete moves if you own VYM:

  1. If your highest-yielding positions are in a brokerage account, put VYM second in line. Move BDCs and mortgage REITs into the Roth first. They bleed at ordinary rates, not 15%.
  2. If you only own broad dividend ETFs like VYM, the Roth is still the right home for new contributions. The elevated Q4 distributions (the $0.9474 December 2025 payment, the $0.9642 Q4 2024 payment, and the $1.0995 Q4 2023 payment) often include capital gains pass-throughs that can be taxed less favorably than qualified dividends.
  3. Before your next tax filing, pull your 1099-DIV and check the qualified vs. ordinary split on VYM’s distributions. The number sets your real Roth advantage at your bracket.

The tax cost of holding VYM outside a Roth is smaller than holding a BDC outside a Roth. It is not zero. At a 24% bracket, you are surrendering roughly 15% of every distribution that the Roth would otherwise let you keep and compound. Over decades, that is the permanent cost of choosing the wrong account for the right stock.

Photo of Danielle Liverance
About the Author Danielle Liverance →

I've spent more than 15 years inside enterprise software, working alongside the finance, sales operations, and HR leaders who run the revenue engines at some of the largest tech companies in the country.

My day job is helping enterprise executives make smarter decisions about retention, compensation, and growth. These are the same operational levers that show up in every earnings report investors actually read. That perspective shapes my writing for 24/7 Wall St.

The headline numbers are easy. The interesting stuff is underneath: how companies make money, what executives are worried about, and what any of it means for the person checking their 401(k) on a Sunday afternoon. I write about personal finance and business as someone who has spent her career inside the rooms where these decisions get made.

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