QQQ vs VOO — Dividend & DRIP Comparison
Side-by-side live data and DRIP projection for Invesco QQQ Trust and Vanguard S&P 500 ETF.
- Price
- $738.31
- Forward yield
- 0.38%
- 5Y dividend CAGR
- 12.06%
- 5Y price growth
- 17.31%
- Frequency
- quarterly
- Price
- $695.49
- Forward yield
- 1.02%
- 5Y dividend CAGR
- 5.91%
- 5Y price growth
- 12.53%
- Frequency
- quarterly
Key metrics
| Metric | QQQ | VOO | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forward yield | 0.38% | 1.02% | +0.64pp VOO |
| 5Y dividend CAGR | 12.06% | 5.91% | — |
| 5Y share-price CAGR | 17.31% | 12.53% | +4.78pp QQQ |
| Distribution frequency | Quarterly | Quarterly | — |
| Expense ratio | 0.20% | 0.03% | — |
| Strategy | Nasdaq-100, ~100 of the largest non-financial Nasdaq stocks | S&P 500 cap-weighted, 500 stocks | — |
| Tax treatment | Mostly qualified | Mostly qualified | — |
| AUM | $305B | $540B | — |
| Inception | Mar 1999 | Sep 2010 | — |
Historical — $10,000 invested 5 years ago
| QQQ | VOO | Δ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial shares purchased | 29.0 | 25.4 | — |
| DRIP shares accumulated | +0.9 | +1.9 | — |
| End shares | 29.9 | 27.3 | — |
| End share price | $738 | $695 | — |
| End value (with DRIP) | $22,091 | $18,994 | +$3,097 QQQ |
| Total return (no DRIP) | 117.99% | 85.07% | — |
| Total return (with DRIP) | 120.91% | 89.94% | — |
| Total CAGR (with DRIP) | 17.18% | 13.69% | — |
| Cumulative dividends paid | $359 | $817 | — |
| Yield on cost (today) | 0.84% | 1.95% | — |
Project both into the future
Dividend behavior
How they differ
QQQ and VOO are the two most widely held U.S. equity ETFs, and their dividend profiles tell a story about what each fund prioritizes. VOO, Vanguard's S&P 500 fund, carries a forward yield of approximately 1.05% — modest, but backed by a five-year dividend growth rate of around 5.91%. QQQ, Invesco's Nasdaq-100 fund, yields roughly 0.40% because its underlying holdings — dominated by mega-cap technology companies — reinvest far more earnings than they pay out. On a five-year price-appreciation basis, however, QQQ's underlying SPG of 16.95% has outpaced VOO's 12.22%, reflecting the superior earnings growth of its tech-heavy composition.
For income-focused DRIP investors, the difference is material. VOO's 1.05% starting yield is more than double QQQ's 0.40%, and VOO's dividend growth of ~5.91% builds a more meaningful income stream over time. QQQ's quarterly distributions are small enough that DRIP reinvestment contributes relatively little to total return versus share-price appreciation — reinvestment is still valuable, but the income component plays a much smaller role than in VOO.
Both funds charge low expense ratios, offer deep liquidity, and hold quarterly distribution schedules. Their overlap at the top — Apple, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and Alphabet appear in both — is significant, but QQQ concentrates its 100-stock portfolio far more heavily in technology and consumer discretionary sectors than VOO's 500-stock spread across the full market. That concentration is the source of QQQ's historically higher price volatility and higher long-run growth, not a contradiction of it. Investors who already hold QQQ for total return sometimes pair it with a separate higher-yield fund to compensate for the thin income stream.
For pure DRIP modeling, the two funds behave differently over long time horizons. VOO's higher starting yield, combined with a 5.91% five-year dividend growth rate, produces a compounding income stream that becomes increasingly meaningful in later years of accumulation. QQQ's income contribution is modest enough that its DRIP benefit is primarily about fractional-share accumulation rather than yield-on-cost expansion. An investor holding both in a tax-advantaged account can use VOO's quarterly payments for systematic reinvestment while relying on QQQ for price-growth exposure. VOO suits investors seeking a diversified core with steady, growing income from broad market participation; QQQ fits a portfolio deliberately overweighting technology that accepts a negligible starting yield in exchange for higher long-run total-return potential driven by price appreciation.
About
Nasdaq-100, ~100 of the largest non-financial Nasdaq stocks
- Issuer
- Invesco
- Inception
- Mar 10, 1999
- AUM
- $305.0B
- Expense ratio
- 0.20%
- Payout
- Quarterly
- Strategy
- Dividend
S&P 500 cap-weighted, 500 stocks
- Issuer
- Vanguard
- Inception
- Sep 7, 2010
- AUM
- $540.0B
- Expense ratio
- 0.03%
- Payout
- Quarterly
- Strategy
- Dividend