Vanguard Intermediate-Term Corporate Bond ETF (NASDAQ:VCIT) and iShares 3-7 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NASDAQ:IEI) differ most in cost, yield, and portfolio composition — VCIT offers a lower expense ratio and higher payout, while IEI focuses on U.S. Treasuries and shows lower historical drawdowns.
Both VCIT and IEI provide exposure to intermediate-term U.S. bonds, but with distinct strategies: VCIT emphasizes investment-grade corporate debt, while IEI tracks U.S. Treasury bonds in the three- to seven-year maturity range. This comparison unpacks how those choices play out across cost, risk, and portfolio makeup.
Metric | VCIT | IEI |
|---|---|---|
Issuer | Vanguard | IShares |
Expense ratio | 0.03% | 0.15% |
1-yr return (as of 2026-04-22) | 8.7% | 4.2% |
Dividend yield | 4.7% | 3.6% |
Beta | 0.35 | 0.15 |
AUM | $66.4 billion | $18.8 billion |
Beta measures price volatility relative to the S&P 500; beta is calculated from five-year monthly returns. The 1-yr return represents total return over the trailing 12ย months.
VCIT looks substantially more affordable, with a 0.03% expense ratio compared to IEIโs 0.15%. VCIT also offers a higher yield, which may appeal to income-focused investors.
Metric | VCIT | IEI |
|---|---|---|
Max drawdown (five years) | (20.55%) | (13.88%) |
Growth of $1,000 over five years | $1074 | $1023 |
Growth of $1,000 reflects total return with dividends reinvested over the trailing five years; price-only performance was negative for both funds over the same period.
IEI is a pure-play on intermediate-term U.S. government bonds, holding 83 Treasury securities with maturities between three and seven years. The largest allocations are to Treasury Notes maturing in 2029 and 2030, each around 3%. With a fund age of 19.3 years, IEI offers a focused, high-quality approach for those seeking government-backed debt and minimal credit risk.
VCIT, on the other hand, holds more than 340 investment-grade corporate bonds, with top positions in Meta Platforms Inc 4.88% 11/15/2035, Anheuser-Busch Cos LLC / Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide Inc 4.70% 02/01/2036, and Pfizer Investment Enterprises Pte Ltd 4.75% 05/19/2033. This corporate tilt may introduce higher yield but also more credit risk compared to IEIโs Treasuries. Neither fund introduces leverage, currency hedging, or other structural quirks.
Don’t read this as VCIT being the obvious pick just because it’s cheaper and yields more. The two funds aren’t really substitutes โ they’re answering different questions. VCIT holds investment-grade corporate debt, which carries credit risk Treasuries don’t. That shows up in the drawdown numbers: VCIT fell 20.6% at its worst over the past five years, versus 13.9% for IEI. Beta tells the same story, with VCIT at 0.35 moving with stocks more than twice as much as IEI at 0.15. The 8.7% one-year return for VCIT versus 4.2% for IEI is the flip side of that same tradeoff.