Average ETF Lifespan Collapses With Wall Street Antsy for Scale

Exchange-traded fund issuers are shutting new products at the fastest pace in years as competition for investor money intensifies.

The average lifespan of an ETF liquidated in 2026 has fallen to one year and nine months, according to a Bloomberg Intelligence report. That compares with an average age of three years and six months in 2025 and about four years and eight months in 2024.

The shorter lifespan comes as a record number of new ETFs enter the $19 trillion industry, where more than 1,000 products began trading last year. The influx has made it harder for new strategies to attract assets as fewer untapped corners of the market remain. In response, issuers are moving more quickly to close funds that fail to gain traction, according to Tidal Financial Group’s Aga Kuplinska. Closing an unpopular fund once carried a stigma, but firms are now more willing to cut their losses, she said.

“The idea of closing an ETF was almost embarrassing. These days, that’s no longer the case — you launch a product, adopt some metric that if the fund isn’t meeting in 12 to 18 months, let’s close it and recycle the resources,” said Kuplinska, senior vice president of product development at the firm. “There’s opportunity costs built into leaving a product on the shelf that’s not raising assets.”