Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab: Which Brokerage Is Best? (2024)

Fidelity, Vanguard and Schwab are massively popular investment companies. Money expert Clark Howard recommends all three.

If you’re deciding which one to use, take a close look at Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab, because there are some differences between the companies.

In this article, I’ll help you understand those differences and hopefully point you toward the brokerage that’s best for you.

Table of Contents

  • Why Clark Loves All 3 Companies
  • Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab: 10 Common Use Cases
  • Comparing Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab
  • Reasons Why You’d Choose (or Avoid) Each Investment Company
  • Questions To Ask Yourself Before Choosing a Brokerage

Why Clark Loves All 3 Companies

If you’ve listened to Clark for any period, you know he recommends Fidelity, Schwab and Vanguard quite often as preferred investment companies.

Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab: Which Brokerage Is Best? (1)“The reason I love the three of them, and the reason I always go in my recommendations to the three of them, is what they offer is so comprehensive, it’s affordable and it’s all about you,” Clark says.

All three companies provide low costs for investing including commission-free trades. Vanguard and Schwab offer extremely low-cost advice you can trust. You can use Fidelity or Schwab to do your banking.

In other words, you can handle your comprehensive financial needs — including banking and retirement planning — within this group of three investment companies.

“These three companies have grown to be such huge behemoths because people just realized over time that these three were doing a much better deal of serving the investor than the traditional investment community,” Clark says.

In full disclosure, Clark Howard actively does business with Fidelity, Vanguard and Schwab. However, he does not recommend the complication of operating accounts with all three companies simultaneously for most investors. Clark advises you to decide which of the three is the best fit.

Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab: 10 Common Use Cases

It’s hard to go wrong investing with any of these three companies.

However, I’ve looked at 10 factors that may interest you when deciding which brokerage to use.

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I’ve chosen a “winner” for each category.

1. Target Date Funds: Vanguard

Choosing between Fidelity and Vanguard here is splitting hairs. But Vanguard relies on many of its own index funds within its catalog of target date funds, so I’ll give it the edge.

2. Index Funds: Vanguard

Clark almost always recommends Fidelity Zero, aptly named for zero cost. For overall selection, average expense ratio and general index fund expertise, it’s hard to argue with Vanguard. But I must mention Fidelity’s trump card.

3. Individual Stocks: Fidelity

With the best mobile trading platform, the best education and the best order execution of the three companies, Fidelity tops this category.

4. Low Fees: Fidelity

Outside of $0 commissions on stock, ETF and options trades, which are now commonplace, investment companies can rival banks with hidden and expensive fees.

Fidelity comes the closest to being fee-free even when it comes to more complicated or nuanced investment strategies.

5. Education: Fidelity

Fidelity’s Learning Center is everything you want in investment education. It’s organized and thorough and offers content through just about any medium you can think of.

Fidelity’s educational materials cater to beginners and experts separately and also offer roadmaps with progress tracking.

6. Research: Schwab

There’s a strong argument that Schwab was already No. 1 in terms of giving you tools to research individual companies and ETFs. Then it acquired one of its two top competitors in the research space: TD Ameritrade. It would be tough now for any competitor to claim research tools that even approach what Schwab offers.

7. Financial Advisors: Vanguard

Vanguard’s Digital Advisor offers robo-advisor services with a $3,000 minimum.

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If you have at least $50,000 to invest, it’s hard to do better than Vanguard’s Personal Advisor, which typically charges 0.35%.

Basically, it’s a robo-advisor for your investments. But you get the bonus of access to a human financial planner, including coaching calls on several topics.

8. IRAs: Schwab

This is another extremely close call, as Fidelity is excellent in this space as well.

Schwab’s IRAs get the edge, at least in part because of the all-around strength and comprehensive nature of Schwab’s products and services.

But the company also does a good job giving IRA customers strong choices including the ability to invest your IRA through its robo-advisor and get help from a financial advisor.

9. Physical Locations: Schwab

With nearly 400 branch locations, Schwab has nearly twice as many as Fidelity (390 to 215 by my count). Of course, if in-person help matters to you, the answer to “best” in this category may depend on which company has a branch closest to your home or office.

10. Active Trading: Fidelity

Fidelity’s superior trading platform, education and order execution make it the best choice of the three here.

Fidelity is a good option for active traders even within the scope of the broader marketplace. However, there may be reasons why those who trade for a living (or as a serious hobby) decide to use other investment companies instead.

Comparing Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab

Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab: Minimum Deposits and Commissions

FidelityVanguardSchwab
Minimum
Deposit
$0$0$0
Commissions
(Stocks/Options/ETFs)
$0$0$0
Transaction Fees
(Mutual Funds)
Up to $49.95/trade (buy)Up to $20/tradeUp to $74.95/trade (buy)
Commissions
(Options Contracts)
$0.65/contract$1/contract$0.65/contract

All three investment companies also offer $0 commissions on stocks, options and ETFs. And you can open an account at any of the three brokerage firms without making a deposit.

However, Vanguard traditionally requires the most capital. Its STAR Fund requires a minimum investment of $1,000; most of its other funds require $3,000.

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Vanguard is also 35 cents more expensive per options contract. (Clark discourages options trading because it’s risky.)

Fidelity and Schwab charge higher transaction fees on mutual funds.

Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab: Asset Classes, Features and Services

FeatureFidelityVanguardSchwab
Bonds???
Broker-assisted trades???
Cash management?X?
Cryptocurrencies???
ETFs???
Financial advisors???
Forex?X?
Fractional shares?Vanguard ETFs only?
Futures/commoditiesXX?
Mutual funds???
Robo-advisors???
Short selling???
Stocks???

The major theme this chart reflects is that Vanguard’s services are narrower in scope than those offered by Fidelity or Schwab. Vanguard mainly serves long-term, low-cost investors.

Vanguard doesn’t offer a cash management account. You can handle your day-to-day banking through Fidelity and Schwab as you would with an online bank or credit union.

Vanguard also does not offer Forex trading and doesn’t offer any appreciable fractional shares program. Fidelity and Schwab offer fractional shares, although there are other companies with more expansive fractional share offerings.

Schwab is the only one of the three that offers futures trading.

Clark also went into great detail about Vanguard’s customer service shortcomings on a podcast. He says Vanguard needs to prioritize improving the customer experience from its phone support to its app even if it means temporarily halting its decades-long war on fees.

Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab: Account Types

Fidelity, Vanguard and Schwab all offer the following account types:

  • 401(k)
  • 529
  • Custodial
  • Individual Retirement Account (IRA)
  • Joint
  • Taxable
  • Trust

You can basically open every account type in the book at any of the three investment companies. There are small differences, for example, between the IRAs each company offers. However, what Clark says is true: These brokerage firms are comprehensive.

Reasons Why You’d Choose (or Avoid) Each Investment Company

Fidelity Investments: Fewer Fees, Better Education

If you’re a fee-conscious investor, which is smart, Fidelity may be the best investment company for you.

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In addition to commission-free trades, Fidelity doesn’t make money on Payment for Order Flow (PFOF), and that often means you’ll get a better price per share. It offers several zero expense ratio mutual funds (Fidelity Zero funds). And unlike Vanguard and Schwab, Fidelity doesn’t charge fees for things like insufficient funds or bank wires.

Fidelity may offer the best investment education in the industry, especially when it comes to planning for retirement.

The in-house Fidelity Viewpoints content, which provides market analysis, draws consistent praise. The company’s robust online learning center offers videos, articles, podcasts and infographics that cater to every level of investor. Fidelity also offers free in-person help and hosts investor seminars.

The Fidelity Rewards Visa® Signature® credit card, which recently made our list of the best rewards credit cards, offers 2% cash back awarded as a $50 credit to your Fidelity investment account for every $2,500 you spend.

Clark hasn’t liked Fidelity’s robo-advisor plus financial planner hybrid as much as the other two companies in the past. But Fidelity has slashed its price (0.50% before, now 0.35% annually).

Customers may need to use multiple platforms to take full advantage of Fidelity’s research and investment tools.

The Vanguard Group: Great for Index Funds

Vanguard is especially strong on low-cost index funds for long-term investors.

Known for consistently producing the lowest average expense ratio in the industry, this is a great company to use if you’re looking to buy index funds.

One of Clark’s primary investment recommendations is to diversify by buying three different index funds: a total stock market, an international and a bond fund. Vanguard is a great place to do that. It’s also a good place to park your emergency fund in a short-term bond fund.

Clark loves Vanguard’s Personal Advisor Select, which gives you unlimited access to a specific Certified Financial Planner and invests your money through a robo-advisor while typically charging 0.35% annually for low-level investors.

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Personal Advisor Services does require an initial investment of at least $50,000. And Vanguard’s proprietary funds carry minimum investments between $1,000 and $3,000.

As I mentioned, Clark has taken Vanguard to task the last few years for letting its customer service slip.

Vanguard doesn’t offer any banking services. And it can’t compete with Fidelity or Schwab in terms of research, education and functionality. Vanguard’s focus is inexpensive, no-frills, long-term investing.

Charles Schwab: Tremendous Research Tools

Schwab would be a popular choice for self-directed investors on the strength of its superior research capabilities alone.

But now that it has bought TD Ameritrade, also strong on the research front, Fidelity is the only brokerage that can hope to compete with Schwab’s powerful research tools.

Those strong Schwab research and screening tools extend to exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which are commonly index funds, one of the best ways to invest on your own. Schwab’s proprietary StreetSmart Edge software could be the best ETF research tool on the market, and you can use it even if you aren’t a Schwab customer.

Schwab also has tools that help you research stocks, ETFs and mutual funds simultaneously, displaying comparative data.

Clark is a big fan of Intelligent Portfolios Premium. After a one-time $300 planning fee, you’ll pay $30 per month for a robo-advisor service on top of unlimited guidance from a team of Certified Financial Planners. Intelligent Portfolios Premium does require a $25,000 initial investment.

Schwab did not make our list of the best robo-advisors in part because it keeps a disproportionate amount of its portfolios in cash. Schwab’s cash management accounts currently pay just 0.48% APY. Schwab is more aggressive than Fidelity and Vanguard about profiting from the cash of its customers.

Questions To Ask Yourself Before Choosing a Brokerage

Before you decide between Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab, you should assess your goals, circ*mstances and personality.

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Do you want to make your retirement investing strategy as simple as possible? You’ll want to consider investing in a target date fund at one of the three investment companies on this list or with a robo-advisor.

Do you need help with tax strategy, estate planning and the best way to take distributions from your investment accounts during retirement? Perhaps you need to start by finding a financial planner, which could lead you to the hybrid options at Vanguard or Schwab that Clark recommends.

Are you thinking about taking more risk with a small amount of money outside of your core portfolio? Depending on what (or how) you choose to trade you may want to consider a brokerage firm outside of Fidelity, Vanguard and Schwab. I wrote about some of the reasons to consider another company.

Regardless of your current financial status, it’s a good idea to know how to save and invest like Clark Howard.

And once you know how you’d like to invest, you should consider these factors when evaluating any investment company (including the three in this article):

  • Fees and commissions
  • Asset classes offered (examples: stocks and bonds)
  • Account types (examples: taxable, IRA)
  • Relevance to your particular needs (You may not need a company known for superior research tools if you plan on putting every dollar in a target date fund.)
  • Usability (website and app)
  • Customer service

Final Thoughts

Fidelity, Vanguard and Schwab are super popular in the United States for good reason. They make the most sense for most investors.

However, even though we tend to group them at Clark.com since we recommend all three companies, there are subtle and not-so-subtle differences between them. Understanding those differences will serve you well in the long run so you can work with the company that’s best aligned with your financial goals.

Fidelity vs. Vanguard vs. Schwab: Which Brokerage Is Best? (2024)

FAQs

Which is better, Vanguard or Fidelity or Schwab? ›

For long-term, low-cost fund investments, Vanguard is ideal; Fidelity suits active traders seeking a wide array of options, and Schwab is well-suited for a comprehensive investment experience, including mutual funds, ETFs and banking services.

Which brokerage is better, Fidelity or Vanguard? ›

Overall, you might save money at Fidelity if you trade options, but Vanguard will be cheaper if mutual funds are your focus. The key difference is that Fidelity is low-cost for a wide range of investor types, while Vanguard is a great low-cost solution aimed primarily at buy-and-hold investors.

Is it better to invest with Schwab or Fidelity? ›

Fidelity is generally better for lower account balances (accounts less than $25,000) and direct crypto exposure. Charles Schwab is better for higher balances and offers a more comprehensive selection of advanced charting tools like the thinkorswim platform.

Why is Charles Schwab better than Vanguard? ›

Charles Schwab offers a wider user experience through multiple platforms. Vanguard is still easy to use, but its features and look and feel are a step behind Schwab.

What is the downside to Fidelity? ›

Fidelity has average trading and low non-trading fees, including commission-free US stock trading. On the negative side, margin rates and fees for some mutual funds can be high. We compared Fidelity's fees with two similar brokers we selected, E*TRADE and TD Ameritrade.

What are the disadvantages of a Vanguard brokerage account? ›

Cons
  • Relatively high minimum investment requirements for many fund options.
  • Higher-than-average per-contract options fee.
  • Slow process to open an account.
  • No trading platform for active traders.
  • No fractional shares of stocks or ETFs.

What is the best brokerage to use? ›

Summary of the best brokers:
  • Robinhood.
  • Charles Schwab.
  • E*TRADE.
  • J.P. Morgan Self-Directed Investing.
  • Public.
  • SoFi Active Investing.
  • Ally Invest.
  • Firstrade.
Jul 29, 2024

Can I switch from Fidelity to Vanguard? ›

Transferring cash from your Fidelity account to Vanguard involves simple electronic transactions, allowing for quick and efficient movement of funds between the two financial institutions. When initiating a cash transfer, you can typically select an electronic transfer option on your Fidelity account's online platform.

Why is Fidelity the best? ›

Fidelity has excellent investment platforms for active traders and investors of all types, including mobile, desktop, and the downloadable Active Trader Pro. In contrast with competitors, fees are negligible and many services and products are fee-free.

Who is Fidelity's biggest competitor? ›

Fidelity Investments's competitors
  • Fidelity Investments.
  • Brighthouse Financial.
  • Franklin Templeton.
  • Principal Financial Group.
  • Vanguard.
  • Voya Financial.
  • Legg Mason.
  • TIAA.

Is my money safe in Schwab brokerage account? ›

We're a member of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), which protects securities customers of its members with coverage of up to US$500,000 (including US$250,000 for claims for cash).

Is my money safe in Fidelity brokerage account? ›

All Fidelity brokerage accounts are covered by SIPC. This includes money market funds held in a brokerage account since they are considered securities. Learn more about SIPC coverage at www.sipc.orgOpens in a new window.

Why do people prefer Vanguard over Fidelity? ›

While both institutions offer robo-advisors, Vanguard's Personal Advisor Services, which is available to clients who can meet a $50,000 account minimum, offers a little more hands-on investment guidance and assistance with portfolio construction. Vanguard also has slightly lower expense ratios on its index funds.

Why do people choose Vanguard? ›

Vanguard is owned by its funds, which in turn, are owned by their shareholders. With no other parties to answer to and no conflicting loyalties, Vanguard makes decisions, including the decision to keep investing costs as low as possible, with clients' interests in mind.

Why should I choose Schwab? ›

Security guarantee. We cover losses in your Schwab accounts due to unauthorized activity. Plus, we help keep you secure with two-step authentication and tips on spotting scams.

Is Vanguard the best way to invest? ›

Vanguard is the king of low-cost investing, making it ideal for buy-and-hold investors and retirement savers. But beginner investors and active traders will find the broker falls short despite its $0 stock trading commission, due to the lack of a strong trading platform and accessible educational resources.

What is the best brokerage for mutual funds? ›

NerdWallet's Best Brokers for Mutual Funds of August 2024
  • Charles Schwab.
  • Interactive Brokers IBKR Lite.
  • Vanguard.
  • J.P. Morgan Self-Directed Investing.
  • E*TRADE.
  • SoFi Active Investing.
  • Axos Self-Directed Trading.
  • Firstrade.
4 days ago

Is Fidelity the best online brokerage? ›

From 2022 through 2024, NerdWallet1 has rated Fidelity the Best App for Investing and the Best Online Broker for Beginning Investors. StockBrokers.com2 also rated Fidelity #1 Overall Broker in 2022, 2023, and 2024. In 2023, both Barron's3 and Kiplinger's4 awarded Fidelity Best Online Broker.

What is the best investment at Charles Schwab? ›

The Best Schwab Mutual Funds of August 2024
FundExpense Ratio
Schwab S&P 500 Index Fund (SWPPX)0.02%
Schwab U.S. Aggregate Bond Index Fund (SWAGX)0.04%
Schwab Tax-Free Bond Fund (SWNTX)0.38%
Schwab Fundamental US Small Company Index Fund (SFSNX)0.25%
3 more rows
Jul 1, 2024

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