ETF

DGRO vs. VIG: Which Dividend-Growth ETF Compounds Your Income Faster?

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By John Seetoo Published

Quick Read

  • DGRO beat VIG across every measured window, returning 252% over ten years versus VIG's 243%, driven by looser dividend eligibility rules.

  • DGRO's 5-year dividend history requirement admitted Apple and Broadcom early, making them high-growth payers that VIG's 10-year rule systematically locked out.

  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

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DGRO vs. VIG: Which Dividend-Growth ETF Compounds Your Income Faster?

© Investment and saving money concept. A man placing coins with growing tree with white up arrow of financial developments and business growth (Shutterstock.com) by Sichon

The iShares Core Dividend Growth ETF (NYSEARCA:DGRO) and the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (NYSEARCA:VIG) look like siblings on any fund screener: both hunt large-cap U.S. companies with a history of raising dividends, both charge single-digit basis points, and both distribute quarterly. The real divergence sits in the fine print of their index rules, and that fine print has pushed DGRO ahead of VIG on total return over one-, five-, and ten-year windows.

What each fund is actually betting on

VIG tracks an index that requires 10 or more consecutive years of dividend increases and screens out the top 25% of yielders to avoid distressed payers. That rule set is a quality filter dressed as a dividend strategy. It biases the portfolio toward mature, cash-generative franchises: Microsoft at 3.97%, JPMorgan Chase at 3.59%, Eli Lilly at 3.34%, Exxon Mobil at 2.91%, and Walmart at 2.61% anchor the top of the book across 342 positions. VIG is really betting on dividend discipline as a proxy for durable earnings quality.

DGRO takes a looser but arguably smarter approach. It requires only five years of dividend growth, layers on a positive-earnings screen, and excludes the highest-yielding decile. That shorter runway lets DGRO include newer dividend payers VIG’s rule set locks out for years. The result: Broadcom at 3.25%, Apple at 2.93%, and AbbVie at 2.52% sit in DGRO’s top five, alongside JPMorgan at 3.04% and Exxon Mobil at 2.90%. DGRO’s implicit bet is that companies still in the early innings of dividend growth compound faster than companies already known for it.

Where the difference shows up

That structural gap in the eligibility rules has produced a measurable performance gap. Over the past year, DGRO returned 20% against VIG’s 16.62%. Stretch the window and the pattern holds: DGRO returned 67.32% over five years and 251.87% over ten, versus VIG’s 65.46% and 242.88%. The delta traces mostly to DGRO’s willingness to own Apple and Broadcom, both of which VIG’s 10-year rule kept out for much of the last decade. In a market where mega-cap tech drove index returns, that exclusion cost VIG shareholders real money.

Size, cost, and income

VIG is the heavyweight on assets. Its April 30, 2026 filing shows $124.65 billion in net assets against DGRO’s $39.65 billion. VIG’s 0.04% expense ratio also undercuts DGRO’s 0.08%, a meaningful edge for buy-and-hold investors compounding over decades.

On the income side, VIG paid $0.9988 per share for Q2 2026, up from $0.8712 in the same quarter a year earlier. DGRO paid $0.330603 for Q2 2026 versus $0.323707 a year prior. VIG carries a slightly lower trailing yield, DGRO a slightly higher one, but both funds are middle-of-the-pack income payers by design. Neither is a yield play.

Metric VIG DGRO
Expense ratio 0.04% 0.08%
Net assets $124.65B $39.65B
Holdings 342 399
Dividend history required 10+ years 5+ years
1-year total return 16.62% 20%
10-year total return 242.88% 251.87%

The verdict

DGRO fits the investor who wants dividend growth without paying the opportunity cost of excluding relatively younger dividend payers. Its five-year eligibility rule and positive-earnings screen have captured tech-driven upside VIG systematically misses. VIG fits the investor who prizes conservatism, a lower expense ratio, and a deeper bench of proven raisers, and who is willing to give up some total return to get it. What would flip the call: a decade of leadership by consumer staples, utilities, and industrials over mega-cap tech. In that world, VIG’s stricter rule set becomes the feature, not the bug.

Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.

Photo of John Seetoo
About the Author John Seetoo →

After 15 years on Wall Street with 7 of them as Director of Corporate and Municipal Bond Trading for a NYSE member firm, I started my own project and corporate finance consultancy. Much of the work involves writing business plans, presentations, white papers and marketing materials for companies seeking budgetary allocations for spinoffs and new initiatives or for raising capital for expansion or startup companies and entrepreneurs. On financial topics, I have been published under my own byline at The Motley Fool, 247wallst.com, DealFlow Events’ Healthcare Services Investment Newsletter and The Microcap Newsletter, among others.  Additionally, I have done freelance ghostwriting writing and editing for several financial websites, such as Seeking Alpha and Shmoop Financial. I have also written and been published on a variety of other topics from music, audiophile sound and film to musical instrument history, martial arts, and current events.  Publications include Copper Magazine, Fidelity (Germany), Blasting News, Inside Kung-Fu, and other periodicals.

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