- Stock Types · Nasdaq ETFs
The Best Nasdaq ETFs To Invest In April 2026
Understanding Nasdaq ETFs
Nasdaq ETFs Snapshot
Key characteristics at a glance
Why Invest in Nasdaq ETFs?
Tech and Innovation Exposure
The Nasdaq 100 includes most major US technology companies including Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, and Meta. A single ETF gives investors broad exposure to the businesses driving the digital economy and the ongoing AI infrastructure build-out.
Strong Long-Term Returns
The Nasdaq 100 has delivered some of the strongest long-term returns of any major equity index, reflecting the underlying earnings power and innovation leadership of its technology-dominated constituents over multiple decades.
Instant Diversification
A single Nasdaq ETF holds 100 leading companies, eliminating single-stock risk while maintaining concentrated exposure to the technology and growth themes. This is far easier than building equivalent exposure through individual stock holdings.
Low Management Fees
Major Nasdaq ETFs charge expense ratios from 0.15% to 0.20% per year - extremely competitive for active US tech exposure. Over decades, low fees compound into significant additional retirement wealth compared to high-cost active funds.
Currency Diversification
For Australian investors, Nasdaq ETF exposure adds USD currency diversification to AUD-heavy portfolios. AUD weakness amplifies USD-asset returns; AUD strength compresses them, providing a useful counterbalance to local-market currency risk.
Easy Access via ASX or US
Australian investors can access Nasdaq exposure either via ASX-listed wrappers (BetaShares NDQ) for simple local-currency trading, or via US-listed ETFs (QQQ, QQQM) through international brokerage accounts. Both approaches deliver similar underlying exposure with different practical considerations.
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3 Best Nasdaq ETFs to Invest In
- Top Pick
Invesco QQQ Trust
- Strong Buy
Invesco NASDAQ 100 ETF
- Long-Term Hold
BetaShares NASDAQ 100 ETF
Nasdaq ETFs vs Other Tech ETFs
Nasdaq ETFs track the largest non-financial companies listed on the Nasdaq exchange, dominated by US technology megacaps.
Nasdaq ETFs
Specialist Tech and Sector ETFs
Pros & Cons of Investing in Nasdaq ETFs
Nasdaq ETFs deliver concentrated exposure to high-quality growth companies, with concentration as both their main feature and main risk.
Advantages
Risks & Disadvantages
How to Invest in Nasdaq ETFs
Choose ASX-Listed or US-Listed
ASX-listed (BetaShares NDQ) offers simplicity, no FX or international account setup, and direct AUD trading. US-listed (QQQ, QQQM) offers lower management fees but requires international brokerage access and W-8BEN tax forms. Most retail investors should default to ASX-listed unless they have substantial allocations.
Compare Management Fees
ASX-listed NDQ charges around 0.48% annually. US-listed QQQM charges around 0.15%. The fee difference compounds over decades, but for typical retail-size positions, the absolute dollar difference is often outweighed by the practical convenience of the ASX-listed option.
Open a Brokerage Account
For ASX-listed NDQ, any standard Australian brokerage works (CommSec, SelfWealth, Stake, Pearler). For US-listed Nasdaq ETFs, use brokers offering international shares (Stake, Interactive Brokers, CommSec International, SelfWealth Global, Pearler).
Set Up Regular Contributions
Dollar-cost averaging works particularly well for volatile growth-tilted ETFs like Nasdaq exposures. Set up automated transfers and trades on a monthly or fortnightly schedule to smooth entry over time and reduce timing risk.
Plan Position Sizes
Nasdaq ETFs can drawdown 30-40% during tech-led sell-offs. Size positions sensibly within your overall portfolio - typically 10-25% of total equity exposure for tech-tilted growth allocations, with broader-market ETFs (VAS, IOZ, VGS) forming the larger portfolio core.
Reinvest Distributions
Most Nasdaq ETFs offer Distribution Reinvestment Plans (DRPs) that automatically reinvest cash distributions into additional units. For accumulation-phase investors with long horizons, DRP is one of the most powerful long-run compounding tools available.
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Is a Nasdaq ETF a Good Investment in 2026?
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Nasdaq ETF?
What's the difference between QQQ and QQQM?
How do Australians invest in the Nasdaq 100?
Are Nasdaq ETFs risky?
What's the difference between the Nasdaq 100 and the S&P 500?
Do Nasdaq ETFs pay dividends?
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