If you bought ProShares UltraPro QQQ (NASDAQ:TQQQ) expecting a clean 3x version of the Nasdaq-100, look at the last five years. The index proxy Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) returned 107.69%. Triple that is 323%. TQQQ actually returned 177.7%. That gap, roughly 145 percentage points of missing upside on a rising index, is the hidden cost the fact sheet won’t frame for you.
What You’re Actually Paying
Start with the sticker. TQQQ’s expense ratio is 0.82%, both gross and net, as of the March 6, 2026 prospectus. On a $10,000 position, that is $82 a year quietly skimmed off the top. QQQ carries a stated 0.20% expense ratio and QQQM runs at 0.15%. On the same $10,000, that is $20 or $15 a year. Compounded over 20 years, the fee difference alone (before returns) is more than $1,200 per $10,000 versus QQQM, without any leverage math attached.
Fees are the visible cost. They are also the smallest one.
The Part the Factsheet Doesn’t Highlight
TQQQ resets its 3x exposure every day. Daily rebalancing means that after a down day, the fund sells into weakness to re-lever, and after an up day, it buys into strength. In choppy markets, that mechanic bleeds return. It has a name: volatility decay. A recent 24/7 Wall St. analysis put it plainly, noting that “the daily reset mechanism in volatile markets erodes its performance, making it unsuitable for long-term holding.”
You can see the drag in the price action. Over the last 12 months, QQQ rose 33.49%. A perfect 3x product would return roughly 100% before fees. TQQQ delivered 96.44%. Close, because volatility was moderate: the VIX averaged 18.09 and currently sits at 16.45. Now widen the lens. Over five years, which included the March 2026 VIX spike to 31.05 and the November 2025 volatility cluster, TQQQ captured barely 1.65x the QQQ return, not 3x. That missing multiple is decay.
Then there is the tail risk. On June 8, 2026, TQQQ dropped 14.28% in a single session after QQQ fell 4.8% on soft AI semiconductor guidance. One bad day can erase months of grinding gains, and the fund has to buy back leverage into the recovery at higher prices. Even institutional buyers accumulating positions, including Goldman Sachs, Citibank, and Cantor Fitzgerald, describe TQQQ as “a tactical tool for sophisticated investors” and explicitly warn it “is not meant for long-term holding.” That is the issuer’s own logic.
The Cheaper Mirror
If you want Nasdaq-100 exposure, QQQ and QQQM own the same 100 stocks with no leverage, no daily reset, and no decay. QQQM is the newer, lower-fee sibling designed for buy-and-hold accounts. Neither will triple a good year. Neither will torch you in a choppy one. The trade-off is clear: you give up the leveraged upside for a product that actually compounds. Over the last 10 years, QQQ returned 581.35%, while TQQQ returned 4,090.63%. Impressive, until you remember that number depends on a decade of near-uninterrupted tech dominance and a starting price of $1.93. Change the starting date to 2021 and the leverage premium collapses.
What This Means for You
TQQQ can print big numbers, and it has. The real question is whether you are being paid enough for the daily reset, the 0.82% fee, and the risk that a single 14% down day resets your position. If you cannot answer that with a specific holding period and exit plan, you may be paying for leverage you are not actually receiving.
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