Key Takeaways
- Individual bonds can offer predictable cash flows, but only if you hold to maturity and avoid defaults.
- Bond funds provide broader diversification and professional management, but they don’t guarantee principal.
- Costs are often hidden in individual bond pricing, while bond funds carry visible expense ratios.
For fixed-income investors, the choice between owning individual bonds and investing in a bond fund can shape not just returns, but also how predictable your portfolio feels. Individual bonds are loans to a corporation or government that you can hold to maturity, while bond funds pool many such loans into a single, professionally managed investment. Both can serve as a safe haven compared to stocks—but their risks, costs, and behavior in volatile markets differ more than many investors realize.
How Bonds and Bond Funds Are Different for Your Portfolio
The key difference is that an individual bond pays interest and returns your principal at maturity (assuming no default), while a bond fund holds many bonds at once and trades them continually. While bondholders get paid interest regardless of whether markets go up or down, they still face risks if a borrower’s credit weakens or defaults.
To reduce the impact of one bad borrower, “people buy bond funds—a collection of diverse corporate and/or government bonds,” says Samantha Mockford, associate wealth advisor at Citrine Capital. Bond funds spread risk across many issuers, much like “stacking pancakes and cutting a bite made up of many thin cakes,” she adds. “This way, your investment is not tanked from one or two unlucky choices.”
Matthew Hofacre, founder of Pay It Forward Financial Planning, warns that many investors misunderstand how these products behave and assume bond funds will act the same as an individual bond. Individual bond values can fluctuate before maturity because they trade in the open market, where prices shift with interest rates, credit risk, and investor demand. Still, if held to maturity and the issuer doesn’t default, they effectively “protect your principal” and have a stated maturity value, Hofacre says. Meanwhile, a bond fund’s value also fluctuates with the market as its underlying bonds are bought and sold (rather than held to maturity), but the fund itself does not have a stated maturity value.
Differences in Costs
Buying an individual bond directly may appear free, but Alvin Carlos, managing partner at District Capital Management, notes that “the cost is baked into the price” through the bond’s bid-ask spread. That cost can rise if you trade frequently before maturity. Other costs can also creep in: Although not always, Hofacre notes that custodians sometimes charge per-bond transaction fees—such as $1 per bond, for example. And if you’re buying an interest-bearing bond on the secondary market, a buyer usually compensates the seller for any accrued interest.
Like individual bonds, bond funds also often incur transaction fees; however, the key difference is that bond funds have transparent expense ratios. You can find “a good low-cost bond fund for as low as 0.03%,” Carlos says, and active managers in bond markets—where inefficiencies are greater—sometimes have a better chance of outperforming indexes than their stock fund counterparts.
Interest Rate Risk for Bonds and Bond Funds
Interest rates and bond prices move in opposite directions—when rates rise, the market value of existing bonds typically falls because new bonds offer higher yields, making older, lower-yielding ones less attractive. With a laddered portfolio of individual bonds—a strategy where you buy bonds with staggered maturity dates—“you control your maturities, so when short-term bonds mature, you can reinvest at new rates,” Carlos says. This steady rollover of bonds can make future cash flows more predictable in a rising rate environment and help smooth out the impact of rate changes over time.
Bond funds, meanwhile, are “constantly buying and selling, so the portfolio never ‘matures,’” Carlos says. This means it may take longer for a fund’s yield to adjust upward after rates rise. Additionally, Hofacre notes that bond funds often pay monthly dividends, which can be appealing for investors needing steady income—though the value of the fund itself can still decline.
The Bottom Line
There’s no universal winner in the individual bonds vs. bond funds debate—it’s about your goals, timeline, and tolerance for market swings. If you value fixed cash flows for specific future needs, then holding individual bonds to maturity can offer stability. If you want broader diversification, professional oversight, and easier reinvestment, then a low-cost bond fund may serve you better.
As Carlos puts it, “A regular investor will typically be better off just buying a low-cost bond fund, as long as they are prepared for a loss during years when interest rates rise.”
