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At the 24% bracket, a high-yield dividend portfolio bleeds thousands to the IRS every year. A passive S&P 500 position behaves differently. The Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA: VOO) yields roughly 1.2%, and its distributions are predominantly qualified dividends taxed at long-term capital gains rates. The case for holding this fund in a Roth IRA rests less on dividend tax drag and more on the compounding capital appreciation that is never taxed upon withdrawal.
Vanguard S&P 500 ETF closed at $688.11 on June 18, 2026, after a 0.98% session gain. Its trailing four-quarter distributions totaled $7.1331 per share, with the most recent quarterly payout of $1.8724 on March 31, 2026. The expense ratio sits at 0.03%, among the lowest available on a U.S.-listed S&P 500 vehicle.
For a 24% bracket investor with a $500,000 position, that yield generates roughly $6,000 in annual dividend income. Because the distributions are qualified, the federal tax in a taxable account is the 15% long-term capital gains rate, not the 24% ordinary income rate that hits BDCs and mortgage REITs. The dividend tax drag exists but remains modest. The larger Roth advantage hides in the price chart.
The dividend comparison on $500,000 in Vanguard S&P 500 ETF at the 24% federal bracket looks like this:
| Scenario | Gross Dividend | Tax | Net Dividend |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taxable (15% qualified rate) | $6,000 | $900 | $5,100 |
| Roth IRA | $6,000 | $0 | $6,000 |
Annual dividend delta: $900. Ten-year dividend delta without growth: $9,000. That is the visible piece. The invisible piece is capital appreciation. Vanguard S&P 500 ETF returned 324% over the past 10 years and 93% over the past five. A $500,000 cost basis growing at that pace produces unrealized gains in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. In a taxable account, every future sale triggers a capital gains event. In a Roth, qualified withdrawals after age 59 1/2 come out at zero tax.
Because qualified dividends carry their own rate schedule (0%, 15%, or 20%), the bracket math for dividends compresses. The ordinary-income bracket still matters for capital gains rate tiers and for net investment income tax exposure. Applied to the same $500,000 position generating $6,000 in qualified dividends:
| Ordinary Bracket | Qualified Div Rate | Annual Tax | Roth Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22% | 15% | $900 | $900 |
| 24% | 15% | $900 | $900 |
| 32% | 15% | $900 | $900 |
| 37% | 20% | $1,200 | $1,200 |
For tax year 2026, the 24% bracket begins at $105,700 for single filers ($211,400 for married filing jointly), and the 37% bracket starts at $640,600 single ($768,700 joint). High earners also face the 3.8% net investment income tax on dividends and realized gains in taxable accounts, a charge that disappears entirely inside a Roth IRA.
The larger Roth advantage on Vanguard S&P 500 ETF goes beyond the $900 in annual dividend tax saved. The embedded capital gains tax that never gets paid is the bigger prize. Suze Orman has framed the long-hold thesis bluntly: “In a Roth, you would let it accumulate for all 10 years and grow and grow and grow. Because when you take it out, it’s all going to be tax free.”
Apply that to the math. The fund is up 25.3% over the trailing year and 8.9% year-to-date through June 18, 2026. Reddit sentiment across r/investing and r/stocks has tracked bullish in the 62 to 72 range, with one of the most-engaged threads asking specifically about Vanguard S&P 500 ETF as the recommended brokerage pair to FXAIX in a Roth. The retail community already treats this fund as a core Roth holding. The math behind that instinct is the permanent elimination of capital gains tax on multi-decade compounding, plus the elimination of dividend tax and net investment income tax on every distribution along the way.
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