// The European investor's manual

VWCE
&
CHILL

One ETF. Every month. Stop thinking about it.

Some broker and tool links are affiliate links — you pay nothing extra. I only list things I’d actually use. If this helped you, consider buying me a coffee ☕.

3,600+
Companies in one fund
47
Countries covered
0.19%
Annual fee. That’s it.
ACC
Dividends auto-reinvest
Buy VWCE · Hold forever · 3,600+ companies · 47 countries · 0.19% TER · Accumulating · Chill · Buy VWCE · Hold forever · 3,600+ companies · 47 countries · 0.19% TER · Accumulating · Chill ·
// Why this works

The market
rewards
patience.
Almost nothing else.

3,600+
Holdings
47
Countries
0.19%
Annual fee
ACC
Auto-reinvesting
01

Open a broker account

Pick one below. Takes 10 minutes. You only do it once.

02

Set up a monthly plan

€50, €500 — doesn’t matter. Automate it and forget about timing.

03

Chill

Seriously. Close the app. Compounding doesn’t need an audience.

92% of active fund managers fail to beat their benchmark index over 15 years. Not a few — almost all of them. These are people doing this full time, with research teams and Bloomberg terminals.

Checking your portfolio at 11pm after a bad news day won’t change that math. Fees eat returns. Taxes eat returns. And every time you react to something, you probably make it worse.

“The stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient.” — Warren Buffett

VWCE is Vanguard’s FTSE All-World ETF in its accumulating share class. Ireland-domiciled, so the tax treatment is better for Europeans. Dividends reinvest automatically. Costs 0.19% a year. Owns a slice of basically everything. Buy it monthly and stop thinking about it.

Not exciting. That’s the whole idea.

// Where to buy VWCE

Pick a broker.
That’s the hard part done.

All regulated EU brokers that carry VWCE. Some links are affiliate links — you pay nothing extra and often get a welcome bonus.

For serious money
Interactive Brokers
What a lot of people quietly migrate to once their portfolio grows. Rock-solid regulation, global market access, and platform costs that become irrelevant once your portfolio has some size.
Open account →
Welcome bonus
Freedom24
EU-regulated, growing fast across Europe. Carries VWCE and has one of the better welcome bonus structures around — a free share for new accounts that fund with €450 or more.
Open account →
Most popular in Europe
eToro
One of the most recognised brokers in Europe and a solid entry point for first-time investors. Stick to the ETF section — buy VWCE, set up a plan, ignore the social trading features.
Open account →
Slickest app
Trade Republic
Commission-free savings plans, 3.25% on uninvested cash, and an app that gets out of your way. One of the cleanest experiences for automated monthly investing in Europe.
Open account →
All-in-one
Revolut
Already in most Europeans’ pockets. Good for currency exchange at real rates before funding your broker — and if you want to keep it simple, you can buy VWCE directly inside Revolut too.
Try Revolut →
Before you invest
Wise
Not a broker. But if you’re moving money between currencies to fund your account, your bank is probably charging you 2–3% to do it. Wise charges a fraction of that.
Try Wise →
// Track & understand

Tools worth
paying for.
Briefly.

More dashboards won’t make you a better investor. These four have actual signal.

📉
Portfolio Tracker
Sharesight
Shows your real return including dividends, not just price movement. Generates tax reports automatically. Works with most EU brokers and handles VWCE natively.
Try Sharesight →
📊
Portfolio Social Network
getquin
Track your portfolio and see how other investors are positioned. Good for staying grounded — seeing long-term, diversified portfolios tends to be more useful than financial news.
Try getquin →
📈
Financial Planning
ProjectionLab
Model your financial future with real scenarios — retirement, FIRE, big purchases. If you want to see whether your monthly VWCE contributions get you where you want to be, this is the tool.
Try ProjectionLab →
📰
Research
Seeking Alpha
For when curiosity kicks in and you want to understand what’s happening inside the companies your ETF holds. Useful for context — just don’t let it tempt you into trading.
Try Seeking Alpha →
// Essential reading

Eight books.
Read them once.
You’re done.

Not a curated list. These are the ones that keep showing up in r/eupersonalfinance, Bogleheads, and r/financialindependence when someone asks where to start.

⭐ My favourite
📒
The Algebra of Wealth
Scott Galloway
Galloway is blunt in a way most finance writers aren’t. Focus, stoicism, time, diversification. Read this before you do anything else with money.
Amazon →
📗
The Intelligent Investor
Benjamin Graham
The original. Graham’s ideas about Mr. Market hold up 75 years later — even if you never pick a stock.
Amazon →
📘
The Little Book of Common Sense Investing
John C. Bogle
Bogle invented the index fund. This book explains why. Short, clear, and harder to argue with than you’d expect.
Amazon →
📙
The Psychology of Money
Morgan Housel
19 essays on why smart people make bad money decisions. Goes down easy and changes how you think about risk.
Amazon →
🗼
The Simple Path to Wealth
JL Collins
One fund. Keep buying it. Stop worrying. Collins wrote this as a letter to his daughter and it became the clearest articulation of the passive investing philosophy you’ll find anywhere.
Amazon →
🏭
The Richest Man in Babylon
George S. Clason
Written in 1926 as parables set in ancient Babylon. The rules — pay yourself first, let money work for you — have not changed. Short, timeless, and surprisingly motivating.
Amazon →
📔
Bogleheads’ Guide to Investing
Larimore, Lindauer & LeBoeuf
The practical manual. Where you go when you want the actual steps, not just the philosophy.
Amazon →
📃
Your Money or Your Life
Vicki Robin & Joe Dominguez
The FIRE starting point. Reframes money as time, not numbers. Worth reading before you decide how much to invest each month.
Amazon →
// Compound growth calculator

See what
your money does
over time.

Default is set to 11.5% — VWCE’s actual average annual return since it launched in May 2012. Drag it down if you want a more cautious number.

500 per month
25 yrs years investing
11.5% VWCE historical avg. since 2012: 11.5%
0 starting capital
Final portfolio value
€0
Total amount invested
€0
Your actual cash out of pocket
Total gains (compounding)
€0
Growth multiple
Every €1 invested becomes this

⚠️ For illustrative purposes only. The 11.5% default reflects VWCE’s actual average annual return since inception (May 2012) as of early 2025 — nominal, not inflation-adjusted. Results shown are net of VWCE’s 0.19% TER. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

// Go deeper

Resources worth
your time.

A short list. Everything here is free, high-signal, and used by serious long-term investors.

🏦
YouTube
Angelo Colombo
One of the clearest voices on passive investing for European retail investors. Covers ETF strategy, portfolio construction, and the practical realities of investing from Europe — without the noise.
Watch →
🎥
YouTube
Ben Felix
Portfolio manager at PWL Capital. Evidence-based, research-backed, and willing to challenge popular narratives with data. If you want to understand why passive investing works at a deeper level, start here.
Watch →
📚
Wiki
Bogleheads — Non-US Guide
The Bogleheads wiki written specifically for investors outside the US. Covers account types, tax-efficient fund selection, broker comparisons, and the quirks of investing from different European countries.
Read →
🔎
ETF Research
JustETF
The go-to database for European-listed ETFs. Use it to look up VWCE’s full fact sheet, compare similar funds, check TER, fund size, and domicile before committing to anything.
Explore →
// Questions

The things people
actually ask.

Why VWCE specifically? +
Three things. It accumulates — dividends get reinvested without you doing anything, which is cleaner tax-wise in most EU countries. It’s Ireland-domiciled, cutting US dividend withholding tax from 30% to 15%. And it’s Vanguard, which is client-owned, so there are no shareholders pushing for higher margins. Similar ETFs exist (IWDA is one), but VWCE’s combination of structure, cost, and reputation is why it keeps coming up as the go-to for European passive investors.
Isn’t one ETF risky? +
Concentration risk is about having too much in one company or sector. VWCE holds 3,600+ companies across 47 countries — that’s about as spread out as it gets. What you’re exposed to is market risk, which every investment carries in some form. The answer to market risk is time, not picking something more complicated.
What about bonds? Shouldn’t I have a mixed portfolio? +
If your horizon is 10+ years and you won’t sell during a bad quarter, 100% equity is a defensible position — most passive investing research supports it for younger investors. Bonds reduce how much the portfolio swings but they pull down long-term returns too. Add them later when you’re closer to needing the money. Being too conservative at 30 is an underrated mistake.
How much should I invest each month? +
Whatever you can leave alone for at least 5 years. €50 beats €0. The amount matters less than doing it consistently — the compounding math is the same shape whether you put in €100 or €1,000, just scaled. Start with what’s comfortable, automate it, and increase when your income does.
What do I do when the market crashes? +
Nothing. Every major crash since 1987 has recovered — 2000, 2008, 2020, 2022. The people who took permanent losses were the ones who sold into the panic. The people who kept their automated monthly buy running picked up shares cheaper without having to think about it. The strategy works precisely because it doesn’t require good timing.
VWCE vs S&P 500 — why not just buy America? +
The S&P 500 has had an incredible run. But it's a bet that the US stays the dominant economy forever — and history doesn't support that kind of certainty about any single country. In 1900, the UK accounted for the largest share of global markets. Then it didn't. Japan was going to take over the world in the 1980s. Then it didn't. Nobody called those shifts in advance.

The whole point of VWCE is that you don't need to. When the balance of power shifts — when China, India, Europe, or somewhere nobody's talking about yet starts leading — VWCE rebalances automatically. The US is currently around 60% of the fund because that's where the market cap is. If that changes, your allocation changes with it. You're not picking the needle. You're buying the haystack.

The S&P 500 isn't wrong. It's just a concentrated bet on one country staying on top. VWCE is the same bet on the world.
Are these affiliate links? +
Yes. Said upfront on the page and again here. I earn a commission if you sign up through a broker or tool link — you pay the same either way and usually get a bonus. I don’t list anything I wouldn’t point a friend to if they asked me in person.

⚠️ Not financial advice. This is an educational site. Past returns don’t predict future ones. Investing carries risk — you can lose money. Do your own research before putting anything in. Some links earn me a commission. Not affiliated with Vanguard.