ETFs in Numbers

ETFs in numbers: The $20 trillion revolution

From niche wrapper to the standard vehicle of modern investing, the exchange-traded fund market has grown faster than almost any other corner of asset management. The numbers tell the story.

 

There are investment trends, and there are structural shifts. In our view, the rise of exchange-traded funds belongs firmly in the second category. In just over three decades, a product that launched as a simple, low-cost way to track the S&P 500 has grown into a $20 trillion global market, shaping how capital flows, how products are built and how all investor types build portfolios.

 

What makes the ETF story particularly compelling is the pace of change. The fastest-growing segment is active ETFs. The fastest-growing regions are outside the United States. The fastest-growing asset class within ETFs is fixed income. We believe that in each case, the data points in the same direction: the next phase of ETF growth looks meaningfully different from the last one.

 

This article maps that story in numbers.

 

  1. Rewriting the record books

It took the global ETF industry roughly 16 years, from the launch of the first US-listed fund in 1993 to 2010, to reach $1 trillion in assets under management. It took another seven years to reach $4 trillion. Since then, the market has grown nearly fivefold.

 

Bar chart showing global ETF assets under management rising sharply from $774 billion in 2008 to $19.8 trillion in 2025, before reaching $21.2 trillion in early 2026.

 

Global ETF assets under management exceeded $20 trillion in early 2026 after adding around $5 trillion in assets during 2025 alone, driven by a combination of strong markets and investor demand.

 

Demand has been consistent as well as large. As of February 2026, the global ETF industry had recorded 81 consecutive months of net inflows.[1]

 

In 2025, net inflows into ETFs globally reached $2.4 trillion, almost 3.5 times the amount that flowed into mutual funds.[2] In the US, ETFs now represent approximately 30% of combined ETF and mutual fund assets, up from around 24% in 2023.[3]

 

  1. A global story, with regional nuance

The United States remains the dominant ETF market by a considerable margin, accounting for around two-thirds of global assets.

 

Treemap showing North America as the dominant ETF region, with around $14 trillion in assets at the end of 2025. Europe follows with around $3 trillion and Asia Pacific with around $1.6 trillion, while South and Central America, Africa and the rest of the world are much smaller.

 

While the US dominates, the most striking growth in 2025 was happening elsewhere.

 

Bar chart comparing regional ETF asset growth in 2025. Asia Pacific grew fastest at 53%, followed by Canada at 47%, Europe at 41% and the US at 30%.

 

Within Asia-Pacific, China ETFs surpassed RMB6 trillion in 2025, overtaking Japan to become the region's largest market.[4] European growth, meanwhile, was driven by expanding product choice and growing retail and institutional adoption.

 

Looking ahead, estimates suggest the regional gap will continue to narrow. Over a third of European industry executives surveyed by PwC expect European ETF assets to more than double to $5.5 trillion or more by June 2030.[5]

 

  1. ETFs vs mutual fund launches

 

One of the clearest signals of a structural shift is not where existing money sits, but where new products are being built.

 

In 2025, ETF launches in the United States grew 45% year-on-year, while mutual fund launches declined. Strikingly, there were nearly ten times as many new active ETF launches in the US as there were new mutual fund launches.

 

Bar chart comparing US ETF and mutual fund launches from 2021 to 2025. ETF launches rose from 462 in 2021 to 1,099 in 2025, while mutual fund launches fell from 291 to 134 over the same period.

 

In Europe, the same dynamic is visible in product availability. The number of active ETF products available to European investors is now eight times higher than it was in 2020.[6]

 

  1. The active ETF surge

 

Within the ETF market itself, the fastest-growing segment by a significant margin is active management. The headline ratio makes the point clearly: active ETFs accounted for approximately 10% of total global ETF assets at the end of 2025 yet captured around 25% of net inflows during the year.

 

That disproportionate flow share is not a one-year anomaly. In the US, active ETF assets grew at a compound annual rate of 65% from 2020-2024, nearly double the rate of the ETF industry as a whole.[7] Since 2015, their share of US ETF AUM has grown from less than 2% to over 11%.

 

Line chart showing active ETFs’ rising share of the US ETF market from 2015 to 2025. Active ETFs rose from 10% to 85.6% of ETF launches, from 2.7% to 32% of ETF flows, and from 1.4% to 11.2% of ETF assets.

 

The acceleration has been supported by regulation. A 2019 SEC rule change in the United States made it significantly easier and less costly to launch and manage active ETFs, removing requirements that had previously acted as a barrier to entry for many managers. The result was a rapid increase in the pace of product development and a virtuous cycle in which growing investor demand encouraged further launches, which in turn attracted more capital.

 

Industry expectations suggest the momentum will continue. Sixty% of executives surveyed by PwC in early 2026 expect global active ETF AUM to more than double to at least $4 trillion by June 2030.[8]

 

  1. Europe: Earlier on the journey, but catching up quick

 

For all the momentum behind the global ETF story, Europe remains significantly under-penetrated relative to the United States.

As mentioned, ETFs now account for around 30% of total fund assets in the US. The equivalent figure in Europe is just 12%, with mutual funds and other traditional structures still dominant.[9] The same pattern holds within the active segment: active ETFs represent approximately 3% of total European ETF assets, compared with 10% in the US.[10] Put another way, Europe's active ETF market is roughly where the American market was five years ago.

 

Funnel chart showing ETF adoption rates across European countries. Germany has the highest adoption at 55%, followed by Austria at 37%, Switzerland at 35% and Portugal at 33%. The UK has the lowest adoption rate at 12%.

 

But the direction of travel is clear, as highlighted by adoption and growth rates.

 

Bar chart showing growth in ETF investors by European country between 2022 and 2025. Growth was strongest in the Netherlands at 197%, Spain at 169% and the UK at 104%. Italy had the lowest growth at 15%.

 

Longer-term projections are also encouraging. PwC's 2026 survey found that over a third of European industry executives expect regional ETF AUM to more than double to $5.5 trillion or more by June 2030, from $2.6 trillion in mid-2025.[11]

 

  1. Beyond equities: A broadening toolkit

ETFs began life as an equity product. The original 1993 SPDR S&P 500 ETF did one thing: track a stock index. For most of the following decade, that remained the dominant use case. What has happened since is a gradual but accelerating expansion into almost every corner of the investment universe, and the pace of expansion is quickening.

 

Today, equity ETFs still compose approximately three-quarters of global AUM, with fixed income at 17%. But those proportions are shifting, and the direction of flow tells a more interesting story than the current stock.

 

Pie chart showing global ETF assets by asset class. Equities dominate with 76.4% of assets, followed by bonds at 16.9%. Alternatives, commodities, money market, mixed assets and other categories together account for less than 7%.

 

Beyond traditional asset classes, gold ETFs attracted $89 billion in inflows in 2025 as gold posted its best year since 1979.[12] Alternatives, options-based strategies, and thematic funds are also growing categories, with buffer ETFs – which use options to limit downside while capping upside – attracting interest from risk-conscious investors.

 

The newest frontier is digital assets. The approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs in the US in early 2024 brought cryptocurrency into the regulated ETF wrapper for the first time.

 

What comes next

 

The numbers above describe a market in transition, with ETFs largely responsible for a product landscape that looks considerably more dynamic than it was a decade ago. The projections for 2030 reflect this:

 

 

2025

2030

Global ETF AUM

$20 trillion

$35 trillion

US ETF AUM

$11.6 trillion

$25 trillion

Europe ETF AUM

$2.6 trillion

$5.5 trillion

APAC ETF AUM

$2 trillion

$5 trillion

Active ETF AUM

$1.7 trillion

$4 trillion

Source: ETFs 2030: Capitalising on disruptive innovation, PWC, March 2026. For illustrative purposes only. Note: 2025 figures for US, Europe and APAC reflect mid-year (June 2025) baselines used in the PwC survey; global figure reflects year-end 2025.

 

We believe that what matters is how the growth in ETFs is changing the options available to investors. As the market expands beyond its equity origins and active strategies gain traction, ETFs are becoming an essential component of portfolio construction.

 

 

 

 

Important Information

 

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[1] ETFGI reports record US$21.24 Trillion in Global ETF Assets, ETFGI, March 2026

[2] ETFGI reports assets in the Global ETF industry Hit Record US$19.85 Trillion as Industry Posts Highest‑Ever Annual Net Inflows, ETFGI, 20 January 2026

[3] Investment Company Fact Book 2026, ICI, Morningstar, as of 31 December 2025

 

[4] SSE ETF turnover ranks first in Asia, Shanghai Stock Exchange, February 2026

[5] ETFs 2030: Capitalising on disruptive innovation, PWC, March 2026

[6] State of the European Active ETF Market, Morningstar, February 2026

[7] The Fast-Growing Market of Active ETFs, US Securities and Exchange Commission, February 2026

[8] ETFs 2030: Capitalising on disruptive innovation, PWC, March 2026

[9] Industry Overview, European Fund and Asset Management Association, December 2025

[10] The US ETF Market: FAQs, ICI, 2026

[11] ETFs 2030: Capitalising on disruptive innovation, PWC, March 2026

[12] Gold Demand Trends Full Year 2025, World Gold Council, January 2026