The post The Case for Holding QQQM in a Roth IRA appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Most articles in this series have focused on high-yield ordinary-dividend stocks where the tax drag is severe. Invesco NASDAQ 100 ETF (NASDAQ: QQQM) is the opposite case. It is a low-yield, growth-oriented equity ETF, and its distributions are largely qualified dividends taxed at long-term capital gains rates rather than ordinary income rates. The real Roth advantage on QQQM is decades of tax-free price appreciation, which is never taxed upon qualified withdrawal.
This exchange-traded fund is built for capital appreciation, not income. Its trailing four quarterly distributions were $0.30245, $0.32301, $0.32769, and $0.35215 per share, with the most recent payment hitting on June 26, 2026. With shares near $292, the running yield is well under 1%, a profile consistent with the underlying NASDAQ-100 exposure.
That low yield is the reason most QQQM holders never think about Roth placement. The annual dividend tax bill is small. The real cost shows up on the other side of the ledger: capital gains. QQQM returned 103% over the trailing five years, rising from $139.17. A taxable account hands back a slice of that gain to the IRS at sale. A Roth does not.
At the 24% federal bracket, QQQM’s qualified dividends are taxed at the 15% long-term capital gains rate. The annual dividend delta on a $500,000 position is small because the yield is small. The capital appreciation delta is where the math gets serious.
| Scenario (24% bracket, $500,000 QQQM position) | Taxable account | Roth IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Dividend distributions (annual) | Taxed at 15% qualified rate | 0% |
| Capital gains at sale | Taxed at 15% long-term rate | 0% on qualified withdrawal |
| Reinvested distributions | Compound after tax | Compound tax-free |
For context on what is being shielded: the same $500,000 invested in QQQM five years ago would now be worth a multiple of that based on the fund’s 103% five-year return. Inside a Roth, that embedded gain is never taxed. In a taxable account, it triggers a capital gains bill at sale.
Because QQQM’s distributions are qualified and its gains are long-term, the relevant rates are the long-term capital gains brackets, not ordinary income brackets:
The higher the bracket, the larger the wedge between taxable and Roth, but the wedge is driven by the capital gains rate, not the ordinary income rate. That is the structural difference between QQQM and a business development company (BDC) or mortgage real estate investment trust (REIT).
The Roth advantage on QQQM is the compounding of a 32.39% trailing one-year and 103% trailing five-year return profile inside a wrapper that never taxes the gain. Compare QQQM’s five-year return against the canonical dividend ETF Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF‘s (NYSEARCA: SCHD) five-year return of 28%. The income story belongs to dividend funds. The tax-free growth story belongs to QQQM.
A second factor is cost. QQQM is a low-fee Nasdaq-100 vehicle and has scaled to $70.9 billion in net assets as of February 28, 2026. Low expenses, tax-free compounding, and a growth benchmark are a stacking effect that runs for decades.
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