The twenty companies that VOO is investing in are:
Check the list and create yours

Here are the 20 largest companies that the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) invests in, based on the most recent publicly reported holdings (VOO tracks the S&P 500 Index, which is weighted by market capitalization). (StockAnalysis)
- NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA) – largest holding ~7.7% of fund (StockAnalysis)
- Apple Inc. (AAPL) ~6.8% (StockAnalysis)
- Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) ~6.1% (StockAnalysis)
- Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) ~3.8% (StockAnalysis)
- Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL/GOOG combined) ~5.6% (StockAnalysis)
- Broadcom Inc. (AVGO) ~2.8% (StockAnalysis)
- Meta Platforms, Inc. (META) ~2.4% (StockAnalysis)
- Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) ~2.2% (StockAnalysis)
- Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK.B) ~1.6% (StockAnalysis)
- Eli Lilly and Company (LLY) ~1.46% (StockAnalysis)
- JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) ~1.44% (FinanceCharts)
- Visa Inc. (V) ~0.99% (FinanceCharts)
- Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM) ~0.87% (FinanceCharts)
- Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) ~0.85% (StockAnalysis)
- Walmart Inc. (WMT) ~0.83% (StockAnalysis)
- Mastercard Incorporated (MA) ~0.80% (StockAnalysis)
- Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) ~0.68% (StockAnalysis)
- Costco Wholesale Corporation (COST) ~0.65% (StockAnalysis)
- Bank of America Corporation (BAC) ~0.61% (StockAnalysis)
- Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) ~0.60% (StockAnalysis)
These weights are approximate and change regularly as markets move and the fund rebalances — always check the latest official holdings from Vanguard for the most current data. (StockAnalysis)
What this means: VOO gives you diversified exposure to the largest publicly traded U.S. companies — mainly mega-cap tech names but also big firms in finance, healthcare, energy, consumer staples, and more — tracking the broad U.S. stock market through the S&P 500 Index. (fool.com)
Try to use the same list
I was thinking, why don't use the same list to invest myself ?
Think about it, if you use the same list you will have the same result or almost the same result. If you don't know, VOO charges you a fee.
The fee that VOO (the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF) charges is called its expense ratio, and it’s very low:
VOO Fee (Expense Ratio)
- Expense ratio: 0.03 % per year — that means you pay about $3 in fees annually for every $10,000 you invest. (monitoring.hafnertec.com)
This fee is automatically taken out of the fund’s returns and you don’t pay it directly out-of-pocket each year — it’s reflected in the share price. (Elliott Wave Street)
What This Means
- Very low cost compared with many other funds (many charge 0.1% or more). (Nasdaq)
- Helps you keep more of your investment returns over the long term. (monitoring.hafnertec.com)
All articles here is not a recommendation.
We just show examples and you need to analyze.
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