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Best REIT ETFs in Canada 2026 | Real Estate ETF Comparison

Updated

REIT ETFs give you diversified real estate exposure through a single ticker. Instead of picking individual REITs, you buy one ETF and get 15–25 Canadian REITs across residential, industrial, retail, office, and healthcare sectors. Here is every REIT ETF available to Canadian investors.

Canadian REIT ETFs

ETF Name MER Yield Holdings Weighting
VRE Vanguard FTSE Canadian Capped REIT 0.38% ~4.0% 17 Market-cap weighted
XRE iShares S&P/TSX Capped REIT 0.61% ~4.2% 18 Market-cap weighted (capped)
ZRE BMO Equal Weight REITs 0.61% ~4.5% 23 Equal weight
RIT CI First Asset Canadian REIT 0.87% ~4.8% 20 Active
CGR iShares Global Real Estate 0.43% ~3.2% 300+ Global

VRE — Best Overall

  • MER: 0.38% (lowest)
  • Holdings: 17 Canadian REITs
  • Top holdings: Canadian Apartment Properties, RioCan, Granite, Choice Properties, CT REIT
  • Best for: Cost-conscious investors who want broad Canadian REIT exposure

VRE tracks the FTSE Canada All Cap Real Estate Capped 25% Index. Its 0.38% MER is the lowest among Canadian REIT ETFs, making it the default pick for buy-and-hold investors.

  • MER: 0.61%
  • Holdings: 18 Canadian REITs
  • Top holdings: Canadian Apartment Properties, RioCan, Granite, Choice Properties
  • Best for: Investors who want the most liquid and widely traded option

XRE is the oldest and most popular Canadian REIT ETF. It tracks the S&P/TSX Capped REIT Index. The higher MER compared to VRE is its only real disadvantage.

ZRE — Equal Weight

  • MER: 0.61%
  • Holdings: 23 Canadian REITs
  • Top holdings: Equally split across all 23 REITs
  • Best for: Investors who want less concentration in top REITs

Most REIT ETFs are market-cap weighted, meaning large REITs like CAPREIT and RioCan dominate. ZRE gives equal weight to all 23 holdings, giving you more exposure to smaller REITs and a slightly higher yield.

Comparison: VRE vs XRE vs ZRE

Feature VRE XRE ZRE
MER 0.38% 0.61% 0.61%
Holdings 17 18 23
Weighting Market-cap Market-cap (capped) Equal weight
Yield ~4.0% ~4.2% ~4.5%
Concentration risk Higher (top-heavy) Medium (capped at 25%) Lowest
Best for Lowest cost Liquidity Diversification

For most investors: VRE wins on cost. ZRE wins on diversification. XRE is the safe middle ground.

Sector Breakdown (Typical Canadian REIT ETF)

Sector Approximate Weight
Retail 30–35%
Residential 20–25%
Industrial 15–20%
Diversified 10–15%
Office 5–10%
Healthcare 3–5%

Canadian REIT ETFs are heavy on retail and residential. To diversify further, consider adding US or global REIT ETFs.

US and Global REIT ETFs (CAD-Listed)

ETF Name MER Yield Focus
CGR iShares Global Real Estate 0.43% ~3.2% Global (40+ countries)
ZGI BMO Global Infrastructure 0.55% ~3.0% Infrastructure + real estate
VNQ Vanguard US Real Estate (USD) 0.13% ~3.5% US REITs only
VNQI Vanguard Global ex-US RE (USD) 0.12% ~3.8% Non-US REITs

US-listed VNQ and VNQI have much lower MERs but require USD purchases and carry foreign withholding tax implications.

REIT ETF vs Individual REITs

Factor REIT ETF Individual REITs
Diversification 15–25 REITs You pick each one
Research needed None Significant
Rebalancing Automatic Manual
Concentration risk Low High (if few holdings)
Yield Moderate (blended) Higher possible
MER 0.38–0.87% $0 (no MER)
Sector control Limited Full control

Build your own if you want to avoid office REITs or overweight industrial. Use an ETF if you want simplicity and broad exposure.

Where to Hold REIT ETFs

Account Recommendation
TFSA Best choice — distributions are tax-free
RRSP Good choice — distributions are tax-deferred
Non-registered Acceptable but requires annual T3 tracking

REIT distributions include return of capital, which reduces your adjusted cost base. This creates annual tax complexity in non-registered accounts that you avoid entirely in a TFSA or RRSP.

How to Buy a REIT ETF

  1. Open a brokerage account
  2. Search for the ticker (VRE, XRE, or ZRE)
  3. Place a market or limit order
  4. Receive monthly distributions to your account
  5. Reinvest distributions or let them accumulate as cash

Portfolio Allocation

A typical allocation to REIT ETFs:

Portfolio Size Suggested REIT Allocation
Under $25,000 Skip — all-in-one ETFs already include real estate
$25,000–$100,000 5–10% in VRE or ZRE
$100,000+ 5–15% depending on income needs
Already own rental property 0–5% — you already have real estate exposure

Note: All-in-one ETFs like XEQT and VGRO include some real estate exposure through their broad market holdings. Adding a REIT ETF on top overweights real estate in your portfolio — only do this intentionally.