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Trading Commission

Investment Fees

Trading Commission

Quick Definition

A trading commission is a fee paid to a broker for executing a securities transaction — buying or selling stocks, ETFs, options, or other securities. Historically charged per trade ($5-$30 at discount brokers; $100+ at full-service brokers), trading commissions were largely eliminated by major US online brokers in October 2019, transforming retail investing economics.

What It Means

For decades, trading commissions were a significant friction in retail investing. A small investor making monthly $500 purchases and paying $10/trade had a 2% immediate drag on each investment. This made frequent investing — including dollar-cost averaging — expensive, and discouraged rebalancing.

The commission-free revolution that swept US brokers in 2019 (triggered by Charles Schwab's announcement on October 1, 2019) fundamentally changed retail investing: it enabled fractional shares, eliminated the cost penalty for frequent small investments, and powered the rise of zero-cost index investing.

The Commission Elimination Timeline

DateEvent
Pre-1975Fixed commission rates mandated by NYSE — often hundreds of dollars per trade
May 1, 1975 ("May Day")SEC deregulated commissions; discount brokers emerged
1980s-2000sDiscount brokers: $15-$30/trade; full-service: $100-$250/trade
2000s-2010sOnline competition drives discounters to $7-$10/trade
2013-2019Robinhood launches $0 commission; others maintain $5-$10
October 1, 2019Schwab eliminates commissions → domino effect industry-wide
2020-presentVirtually all major US brokers: $0 for stocks and ETFs

Current Commission Structure at Major US Brokers (2024)

BrokerStock/ETF CommissionOptions CommissionNotes
Fidelity$0$0.65/contractNo account minimum
Charles Schwab$0$0.65/contractNo minimum
TD Ameritrade (Schwab)$0$0.65/contractMerged with Schwab
Vanguard$0$1.00/contractLong-standing low-cost leader
E*TRADE$0$0.65/contract30+ trades/quarter: $0.50
Robinhood$0$0No per-contract fee
Interactive Brokers$0 (IBKR Lite) / $0.005/share (Pro)$0.65/contractPro for active traders
Merrill Edge$0$0.65/contractBank of America integration

How Brokers Make Money Without Commissions

If commissions are $0, how do brokers survive? Several revenue streams replaced commissions:

Revenue SourceDescription
Payment for order flow (PFOF)Market makers pay brokers to route retail orders to them; most controversial
Net interest incomeBrokers earn spread on cash balances, margin lending
Securities lendingLending client shares to short sellers for a fee
Premium servicesAdvanced trading platforms, margin accounts, premium research
Advisory feesManaged portfolios and financial planning
Mutual fund revenue sharingSome fund families pay for shelf space on broker platforms

PFOF controversy: Critics argue PFOF means orders are executed at slightly worse prices for retail investors, creating a hidden commission. The SEC proposed eliminating or restricting PFOF in 2022-2024 — debate ongoing.

Where Trading Commissions Still Apply

Security TypeCommission Status
US stocks (exchange-listed)$0 at most major brokers
US ETFs$0 at most major brokers
Options$0.50-$0.65/contract (per option contract, not per trade)
Mutual funds (NTF — no transaction fee)$0
Mutual funds (transaction fee)$0-$49.95/transaction
Bonds (secondary market)Mark-up embedded in price; not transparent
International stocks$0-$50 depending on market/broker
OTC stocks (pink sheets)Sometimes charged
Futures$0.25-$2.25/contract
Cryptocurrencies0.50-2.50% spread or fee

Options Trading Commissions

Options still carry per-contract fees at most brokers:

BrokerPer-Contract FeeNotes
Robinhood$0Industry disruption in options too
Schwab, Fidelity, TD$0.65Standard rate; buy 10 contracts = $6.50
Interactive Brokers Pro$0.25-$0.65Volume discounts available
Tastytrade$1.00 to open, $0 to closeOptions-focused broker

A typical 10-contract options trade at $0.65/contract costs $6.50 — still meaningful for frequent options traders.

The True Cost of "Free" Trading

Zero commissions do not mean zero transaction costs:

Hidden CostDescription
Bid-ask spreadThe gap between buy and sell price; always present; market makers profit from it
Market impactLarge orders move prices against the trader
PFOF-related execution qualitySome evidence of slightly worse fill prices vs. lit exchanges
Behavioral costsZero commissions enable overtrading; more trades usually means worse returns

Research shows that commissions were never the primary cost for passive, long-term investors — bid-ask spreads and behavioral errors were always larger. The zero-commission era primarily benefits active traders and frequent small investors.

Key Points to Remember

  • Trading commissions at major US brokers are $0 for stocks and ETFs since 2019
  • Options still cost $0.50-$0.65 per contract at most brokers
  • Brokers replaced commission revenue with PFOF, net interest, and securities lending
  • Zero commissions enabled fractional shares and cost-free rebalancing
  • The true cost of trading includes bid-ask spreads, not just explicit commissions
  • Zero commissions have increased trading frequency — usually not beneficial for investor returns

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: If commissions are $0, why should I care about trading costs? A: The bid-ask spread remains a real cost — on illiquid stocks or during volatile markets, spreads can be 0.10-1.00% of the trade value. For frequent traders, these costs compound significantly. For long-term buy-and-hold investors in liquid index ETFs, bid-ask spreads are minimal (often 0.01%) and trading costs are genuinely near-zero. The bigger risk of zero commissions is behavioral — they remove friction that previously discouraged overtrading.

Q: What is payment for order flow? A: Payment for order flow (PFOF) is when a market maker (like Citadel or Virtu) pays a retail broker (like Robinhood or Schwab) for the right to execute retail customer orders. The market maker profits from the bid-ask spread on each trade. The debate: does PFOF give retail investors better or worse prices than routing to exchanges directly? The SEC has proposed reforms; the debate remains unresolved.

Q: Do robo-advisors charge trading commissions? A: No — robo-advisors like Betterment and Wealthfront buy and sell ETFs on your behalf at zero commission. The robo-advisor's advisory fee (0-0.25%) covers all trading activity. Within a robo-advisor account, rebalancing and tax-loss harvesting generate no additional trading costs.

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