Before you can plan your wealth, you need to know what to invest in. This guide explains ETFs and Tax Free Savings Accounts — the most powerful combination available to South African investors.
An Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) is an investment that tracks the performance of an entire market index — like the JSE Top 40, the S&P 500, or a global market index. Instead of picking individual stocks, you own a slice of hundreds of companies in a single transaction.
Think of it like buying a basket. Instead of choosing one fruit at the market and hoping you picked right, you buy the whole basket — you get a bit of everything, and your outcome reflects the market, not one person's guess.
ETFs trade on the stock exchange just like a regular share. You can buy or sell at any time during market hours. Most SA ETF platforms let you start with as little as R5 — there is no minimum investment that locks you out.
South African examples you'll encounter:
The single biggest advantage of ETFs is not their diversification — it is their cost. Fees compound just like returns do, but in reverse. A 1.5% annual fee sounds small. Over 30 years, it can cost you more than a third of your final portfolio.
Actively managed SA unit trusts charge 1.5%–2.5% per year. Most ETFs charge 0.1%–0.5%. On a R1M portfolio, that difference is R10,000–R20,000 per year — every year, compounding.
One ETF can hold hundreds or thousands of companies across multiple countries and sectors. Single stock risk — where one bad company destroys your investment — is virtually eliminated.
Over any 15-year period, the majority of actively managed funds underperform their index. ETFs simply deliver the market return — which beats most professionals over the long run.
You always know exactly what you own. ETF holdings are published daily. With a unit trust, you often receive a quarterly report showing only the top 10 positions.
ETFs trade like shares — buy and sell any trading day, at real-time prices. Many unit trusts have notice periods or delays before you can access your money.
There is no fund manager who can make bad decisions, leave the company, or go through a bad decade. The index is rules-based — it simply tracks the market.
A Tax Free Savings Account is a government-backed investment account that allows South African residents to invest and pay zero tax on any growth, dividends, or withdrawals — forever. It was introduced in 2015 specifically to encourage long-term saving.
The TFSA's greatest strength is permanence. Growth earned inside a TFSA is sheltered from tax not just this year, but for the rest of your life. A portfolio that doubles inside a TFSA is worth twice as much as one that doubles in a taxable account — because SARS takes nothing on the way out.
Used separately, ETFs and TFSAs are both excellent. Used together, they create something that most investors never fully appreciate: a tax-free compounding engine that grows faster every single year.
Here is what happens inside a TFSA that does not happen in a regular brokerage account:
The table below shows the real difference this makes over time, assuming an R3,000/month contribution into a broad ETF returning 10% per year, with a 4% dividend yield:
| Period | ETF in TFSA (tax-free) | ETF outside TFSA (taxed) | Tax cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 years | R620,000 | R573,000 | R47,000 |
| 20 years | R2,040,000 | R1,740,000 | R300,000 |
| 30 years | R5,920,000 | R4,720,000 | R1,200,000 |
* Illustrative projections only. Assumes 10% nominal return, 4% dividend yield, 20% DWT and 18% effective CGT on taxable account. Actual outcomes will vary.
MyWealthLens's Tax Analysis tool lets you model the exact difference that TFSA tax protection makes on your projected portfolio — with your own inputs, your own timeline, your own return assumptions.
Run My Projection →Once you know your number — the monthly contribution you need to reach your goal — you need a platform to invest it. Here are the platforms we recommend for South African ETF investors. All of them offer TFSA accounts.
South Africa's most accessible investment platform. Start from as little as R5 with fractional shares, access a wide range of local and global ETFs, and open a TFSA in minutes. No monthly account fees.
Direct access to Satrix's range of low-cost index funds and ETFs. Satrix is one of South Africa's most established ETF providers, with products covering the JSE, global markets, and sector-specific indices.
Sygnia is known for extremely low-cost index tracking products, including their popular Sygnia Itrix ETF range covering the S&P 500, MSCI World, and more. Strong TFSA offering.
10X is built around one philosophy: index-only investing with the lowest fees possible. Their TFSA product is straightforward, low-cost, and designed for investors who want simplicity over complexity.