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DIA’s 10-Year Shortfall: How a 186.7% Return Masks a $128K Hidden Cost

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By Michael Williams Published

Quick Read

  • DIA gained just 187% over the past decade while the S&P 500 returned 315%, a performance gap that never appears on any fund fact sheet.

  • VOO (0.03%) and SPY (0.09%) both hold all 30 Dow stocks inside a 500-stock basket while outperforming DIA across every measured timeframe.

  • DIA's price-weighted design lets smaller companies outweigh trillion-dollar tech giants, structurally cutting exposure to the mega-caps that powered the last decade's gains.

  • 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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DIA’s 10-Year Shortfall: How a 186.7% Return Masks a $128K Hidden Cost

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If you bought SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (NYSE:DIA) a decade ago because “the Dow” sounded like the safe, blue-chip way to own America, the fund’s own returns tell a quieter story. Over the past ten years, DIA has gained 186.7%. The same money in a plain S&P 500 tracker gained 314.79%. That gap is the hidden cost, and it did not show up on any fact sheet.

What You’re Actually Paying

DIA is not a low-cost index fund by 2026 standards. Its two natural mirrors, Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA:VOO) and SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY), charge 0.03% and 0.0945% respectively. VOO’s fee works out to roughly $3 per year on a $10,000 balance. DIA’s headline expense ratio is a multiple of that, and the drag compounds every year you hold shares.

You can see the compounding in the return record. Over the past five years, DIA returned 50.77% while VOO returned 86%. Year to date through July 10, 2026, DIA is up 9.41% against VOO’s 11.32%, and over the trailing year DIA delivered 17.76% to VOO’s 22.04%. That reflects a persistent, structural shortfall in the index design.

The Part the Factsheet Doesn’t Highlight

DIA’s real hidden cost is its underlying index. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is price-weighted, meaning a $500 stock moves the index more than a $50 stock regardless of company size. You end up with a 30-stock portfolio where a mid-sized industrial can outweigh a trillion-dollar tech giant. That single design choice explains why DIA has trailed cap-weighted S&P 500 funds so consistently: it under-owns the mega-cap winners that did the heavy lifting of the last decade.

Then there’s the tax bill you may not have noticed. DIA distributes dividends on a monthly schedule, 12 payments per year, and the amounts swing widely, from about $0.14 to more than $1.40 per share. The trailing 12-month total sits near $7.21 per share. In a taxable account, that means 12 separate 1099-DIV entries a year and 12 reinvestment moments where cash sits idle waiting to redeploy. VOO and SPY distribute quarterly. Same asset class, one-third the taxable events, and predictable reinvestment dates you can actually plan around.

The Cheaper Mirror

If your reason for owning DIA is “large-cap American blue chips,” VOO and SPY hold all 30 Dow names inside a broader 500-stock basket at a fraction of the fee. SPY’s top 10 alone, led by NVIDIA at 7.58% and Apple at 6.66%, capture the mega-cap growth engine DIA structurally under-weights. The trade-off is real: you take on more technology exposure and less of the industrial tilt Dow purists prefer. But you pay 0.03% versus DIA’s higher fee, receive quarterly distributions, and, based on the last decade of net-of-fee returns, you have not been giving up performance to get there.

For readers who want the Dow’s defensive character without the price-weighted quirk, equal-weight large-cap and quality-dividend ETFs offer a similar blue-chip feel with fees well below DIA’s. The exposure is close. The cost is not.

What This Means for You

The question worth asking before your next contribution: are you buying DIA because you specifically want those 30 companies weighted by share price, or because “the Dow” feels like a synonym for America’s biggest businesses? If it’s the second, the same exposure is available for pennies on the dollar, with fewer taxable events and a decade of stronger net returns behind it.

Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.

Photo of Michael Williams
About the Author Michael Williams →

I am a long time investor and student of business, and believe finding good companies that can become great investments is the best game on earth. After 20 years of writing and researching the public markets it is clear that individuals have never had more tools and information to take control of their financial lives. From ETFs and $0 commissions to cryptos and prediction markets there has never been a greater democratization of access to investing. 

I write to help people understand the investments available to them so they can make the best choice for their portfolio, whether they're starting out or looking for income in retirement. 

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