VIG

1 BTC

=

- USD

Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF logo

Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF

VIG🇺🇸
0.00318887
0.44%

As of May 30, 2026 at 08:47 UTC

Chart

About Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF

Sector
-
Website
-
Headquarters
-
Employees (FY)
-
Listed
2006-04-21
FIGI
BBG000P5G869

No description available.

Market Statistics

Market Capâ‚¿ 1.35M
24h Volumeâ‚¿ 3.04K
24h Change0.44%
7d Change4.88%
1m Change0.82%

Trading Metrics

Trading Volume (BTC)â‚¿ 3.04K

How to Buy VIG

1

Create Your Account

Sign up, deposit BTC, and transfer it to your Unified Trading Account. It only takes a moment.

2

Start Your Trade

From Terminal, click Trade Now on the asset you want to buy. You'll be purchasing its tokenized asset.

3

Buy VIG

Enter the amount and confirm your purchase. That's it! You'll see the impact of the trade in your Unified Trading Account.

New to Tokenized Assets? Learn more in our Help Center.

Latest News

5 articles
The Motley Fool favicon
The Motley Foolwww.fool.com

The Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG) targets companies with 10+ years of consecutive dividend growth but offers a relatively low 1.6% yield. To generate $500 monthly in dividends, investors would need approximately $375,000 invested. While suitable for long-term dividend growth strategies, VIG is better used as part of a broader portfolio rather than as a primary income-generating vehicle.

The Motley Fool favicon
The Motley Foolwww.fool.com

The article recommends three Vanguard ETFs for long-term investors: VOO (S&P 500 ETF) for broad market exposure with proven 10% average annual returns, VIG (Dividend Appreciation ETF) for compounding growth through companies with 10+ years of dividend increases, and VXUS (Total International Stock ETF) for diversification beyond U.S. markets. The author suggests prioritizing VOO and VIG while keeping VXUS at less than 10% of portfolio for balance.

The Motley Fool favicon
The Motley Foolwww.fool.com

The article recommends four Vanguard ETFs as ideal core holdings for retirement portfolios: VOO (S&P 500), VTI (Total Stock Market), VXUS (Total International Stock), and BND (Total Bond Market). These funds offer ultra-low expense ratios, broad diversification, and high liquidity, making them suitable for long-term retirement investing. The author emphasizes the importance of diversifying beyond just the S&P 500 by including international stocks, dividend-paying companies, and fixed income to mitigate risk.

The Motley Fool favicon
The Motley Foolwww.fool.com

Fidelity's FDVV and Vanguard's VIG offer different dividend strategies. FDVV provides higher current yield (2.80%) with a concentrated portfolio focused on capital appreciation, but charges a higher expense ratio (0.15%). VIG prioritizes dividend growth with a lower expense ratio (0.04%) and more diversified holdings. FDVV suits investors seeking total returns, while VIG is better for conservative long-term buy-and-hold investors.

The Motley Fool favicon
The Motley Foolwww.fool.com

The article compares two dividend ETFs: Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG) and iShares Core High Dividend ETF (HDV). VIG offers lower yields (1.7%) but sustainable dividend growth with a tech-heavy portfolio, while HDV provides higher yields (3%) with quality screens to ensure sustainable income. Over 10 years, VIG outperformed HDV (12.9% vs 9.4%), but the author prefers HDV for its balanced approach combining yield with quality criteria.

1 BTC

=

- USD

Loading market data...