REIT ETFs vs Individual REITs for European Investors: Which Should You Choose?

REIT ETFs vs Individual REITs for European Investors: Which Should You Choose?

Many European investors like the idea of real estate income and diversification without buying a physical property. REITs make that possible. But once an investor decides to add real estate to their portfolio, a practical question follows:

Should I buy a REIT ETF or individual REIT stocks?

There is no universal answer. The right choice depends on your country, tax situation, broker access, risk tolerance, portfolio size, income needs, time horizon, and willingness to analyse companies. This article explains both options clearly so you can decide which fits your situation.


Why European Investors Look at REITs


REITs — Real Estate Investment Trusts — are listed companies that own, operate or finance income-producing real estate. They are required by law to distribute a large portion of their income as dividends, which makes them attractive for investors who want real estate exposure and income potential.

For European investors, REITs offer something physical property does not: the ability to invest in real estate with small amounts, across different countries and sectors, without the costs and complexity of ownership.

What makes REITs attractive:

  • Real estate exposure without buying physical property
  • Dividend income potential from rental and property income
  • Access to sectors beyond residential — logistics, data centres, healthcare, storage, retail
  • Diversification away from pure equity ETFs
  • Listed on stock exchanges — you can buy and sell daily

What makes REITs risky:

  • REITs are listed securities and can be volatile, especially during rate rises
  • They are sensitive to interest rates — higher rates increase borrowing costs and reduce valuations
  • Dividends are not guaranteed and can be cut
  • Different property sectors behave very differently
  • US REITs expose European investors to USD currency risk and withholding tax on dividends
  • Tax treatment depends on your country of residence

REITs are not a substitute for physical property, and they are not a low-risk asset class. They sit somewhere between equities and bonds in terms of volatility and income profile — useful for some portfolios, unnecessary for others.

If you are new to REITs and want to understand how they work in detail read our complete guide on What Are REITs? A Complete Guide for European Investors → before continuing.


What Is a REIT ETF?


A REIT ETF is an exchange-traded fund that holds a basket of listed real estate companies and REITs. Instead of choosing individual companies, you buy one fund that gives you exposure to dozens or hundreds of real estate stocks at once.

For European investors, UCITS REIT ETFs are usually the most practical option. UCITS ETFs are structured under European regulation, available through most EU brokers, and legal to purchase under PRIIPs rules — unlike US-domiciled ETFs such as VNQ.

Advantages of REIT ETFs:

  • Instant diversification across many real estate companies
  • Lower research burden — no need to analyse individual businesses
  • One product gives broad real estate exposure
  • Suitable as a small satellite allocation in a portfolio
  • Available in accumulating or distributing versions depending on tax preference
  • Simpler for beginners who are still learning about REIT sectors

Limitations of REIT ETFs:

  • Less control — you own whatever the index holds
  • Exposure depends on the index, which may be concentrated in certain regions or sectors
  • Some funds include real estate operating companies that are not exactly classic REITs
  • Ongoing TER cost reduces net return
  • Holdings change over time as the index rebalances
  • Distributing versions trigger dividend tax events; accumulating versions may have different tax treatment depending on your country


Examples of REIT ETFs for European Investors to Research


The following are examples to research, not recommendations. Always verify current TER, distribution policy, fund size, domicile and availability on your broker before investing. Data verified on justETF, May 2026.

ETFTickerIndexDistributionTERFund size
iShares Developed Markets Property Yield UCITS ETFIWDPFTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed Dividend+Distributing (quarterly)0.59%€1.06B
iShares Developed Markets Property Yield UCITS ETF (Acc)IWDP (Acc share class)FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed Dividend+Accumulating0.59%€218M
Xtrackers FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed Europe Real Estate UCITS ETFD5BKFTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed EuropeAccumulating0.33%€682M
Amundi FTSE EPRA NAREIT Global UCITS ETF (Acc)A4H5FTSE EPRA/NAREIT DevelopedAccumulating0.24%€332M

Key observations:

The Amundi fund has the lowest TER at 0.24% and is accumulating — the most tax-efficient structure for most European investors in the accumulation phase. The iShares IWDP is the largest and most liquid option, but charges 0.59% and distributes dividends quarterly. The Xtrackers European fund is the option for investors who want only European real estate exposure.


What Are Individual REITs?


Buying individual REITs means purchasing shares in specific listed real estate companies rather than a fund. You choose which sectors, companies and geographies you want and take on the corresponding company-specific risk.

Advantages of individual REITs:

  • Full control over sectors and companies
  • Ability to build a portfolio focused on specific property types
  • No ETF TER — you pay only broker commissions
  • Clearer dividend profile per company — you know exactly what each holding pays
  • Ability to avoid sectors you do not want
  • Potential to focus on high-quality companies with strong balance sheets

Limitations of individual REITs:

  • Requires analysis — sector dynamics, occupancy, debt, dividend coverage, management quality
  • Higher company-specific risk — one bad earnings report can move the stock significantly
  • Concentration risk if you own only one or two REITs or one sector
  • US REITs expose European investors to USD currency risk
  • US dividends are subject to withholding tax, typically 15% under most EU-US tax treaties (verify for your country)
  • Requires ongoing monitoring — REITs change over time
  • Tax reporting is more complex than holding a single ETF


Why Many European Investors Study US REITs



The US REIT market is the most developed and liquid in the world. It covers more sectors, has more analyst coverage, more financial data available, and includes companies that have operated for decades.

US REITs cover sectors that are difficult to access through European-listed real estate companies — particularly data centres, industrial logistics at scale, self-storage, cell tower infrastructure, and life science real estate.

Why European REITs are not always the first focus:

  • The European listed real estate market is more fragmented by country and structure
  • Not all European property companies operate under a formal REIT structure
  • Liquidity and analyst coverage vary significantly between markets
  • Dividend withholding rules and local tax treatment differ across EU countries

This does not mean European real estate is irrelevant. The Xtrackers D5BK ETF provides exposure to European listed property, and some investors specifically want European real estate for currency alignment or familiarity. But for sector depth and variety, many European investors who study individual REITs look primarily at US-listed names.


REIT Sectors European Investors Should Understand


REITs are not all the same. The sector determines what the company owns, who its tenants are, what drives rent growth, and how sensitive it is to economic conditions and interest rates.

SectorWhat it ownsMain things to watch
IndustrialWarehouses, logistics assets, distribution centresE-commerce demand, occupancy, rent growth, location quality, supply pipeline
Retail / Net LeaseShopping centres, net lease properties, single-tenant retailTenant quality, lease duration, consumer spending, interest-rate sensitivity
ResidentialApartments, manufactured housing, single-family rentalsHousing demand, rent regulation, affordability, local market dynamics
Data CentresData centres, digital infrastructureAI and cloud demand, capex requirements, power costs, leverage, valuation
Health CareSenior housing, medical offices, life science propertiesDemographics, operator quality, occupancy, regulatory risk
StorageSelf-storage facilitiesOccupancy, pricing power, housing mobility, local competition
InfrastructureCell towers, communications infrastructureTelecom demand, international exposure, interest-rate sensitivity, debt
SpecialtyCasinos, outdoor advertising, experiential real estateTenant concentration, lease structure, sector-specific demand


Example REIT Watchlist by Sector


These are examples for research only, not buy recommendations. Always read company financials, understand the sector, and consider your tax situation before investing in any individual REIT.


Core REITs to Study

TickerSector
PLDIndustrial
STAGIndustrial
ORetail / Net Lease
ADCRetail / Net Lease
AVBResidential
EQRResidential
DLRData Centres
WELLHealth Care
EXRStorage
VICISpecialty


Additional REITs to Study

TickerSector
TRNOIndustrial
REXRIndustrial
KIMRetail
KRGRetail
SUIResidential
AMHResidential
EQIXData Centres
AREHealth Care / Life Science
CUBEStorage
AMTInfrastructure

These tickers represent a range of sectors and company profiles. Studying them helps build familiarity with how different REIT businesses operate, even if you ultimately choose a REIT ETF instead.


REIT ETF vs Individual REITs: Main Differences

CriteriaREIT ETFIndividual REITs
SimplicityHigh: one product, one decisionLow: requires selecting, monitoring multiple companies
DiversificationBuilt-in across holdingsDepends on how many REITs and sectors you own
ControlLow: you own what the index holdsHigh: you choose every holding
Sector exposureDepends on the index — may be broad or concentratedYou decide which sectors to include or exclude
Research requiredLow: provider manages the fundHigh: financials, debt, dividends, occupancy, management
Company-specific riskSpread across many holdingsConcentrated in individual companies
Income predictabilityDepends on fund distribution policyDepends on each company’s dividend history
CostsOngoing TER (0.24%–0.59% for REIT ETFs)Broker commissions per trade; no ongoing TER
Currency exposureDepends on fund holdings and base currencyDirect USD exposure for US REITs
Tax complexitySimpler: one product per yearMore complex: multiple dividends, withholding tax, reporting
Portfolio maintenanceMinimal: index rebalances automaticallyRequires monitoring and occasional rebalancing
Best suited forInvestors who want simple real estate exposureInvestors who want control and are willing to do the work


How REITs Can Fit Inside a European Investor Portfolio


REITs are usually a satellite allocation — not the core of a portfolio. Most European investors who invest in REITs build their core around broad UCITS ETFs and add REITs as a separate layer if they want real estate exposure or income potential.

These are educational examples only, not recommendations.

Portfolio styleExample allocationRole of REITsWho it may suit
Simple ETF portfolio90% global UCITS ETF, 10% cashNone requiredBeginners who want simplicity
ETF + REIT ETF85% global UCITS ETF, 10% REIT ETF, 5% cashSimple real estate diversificationInvestors who want easy real estate exposure
ETF + Individual REITs80% global UCITS ETF, 15% selected REITs, 5% cashControlled sector exposureInvestors willing to analyse REITs
Income-oriented portfolio70% global UCITS ETF, 20% REITs, 10% cash or bondsIncome and real estate exposureInvestors focused on income, with higher tolerance for volatility

One important note: broad global ETFs like VWCE or IWDA already include some real estate companies. Adding a REIT ETF on top increases real estate concentration deliberately. This is a valid choice — but it should be intentional, not accidental.

For more on building a portfolio structure, see our guide on How to Build a Simple Investment Portfolio in Europe →


What to Analyse Before Buying an Individual REIT


Before buying any individual REIT, work through this checklist. You do not need to be an expert, but you should understand the basics of what you are buying.

What to checkWhy it matters
Sector and property typeDetermines what drives performance
GeographyCountry and local market dynamics
Occupancy rateHigh occupancy = stable income; declining occupancy is a warning sign
Tenant qualityStrong tenants reduce default risk
Lease durationLong leases provide income visibility
Debt levelHigh debt + rising rates = pressure on dividends and valuation
AFFO or FFOFunds From Operations — the real estate equivalent of earnings
Dividend payout ratioAFFO payout above 90–100% may indicate an unsustainable dividend
Dividend historyHas the company cut its dividend before? When and why?
Management qualityTrack record, capital allocation decisions, shareholder alignment
ValuationPrice-to-FFO or price-to-NAV relative to historical range and peers
Credit ratingInvestment grade rating reduces refinancing risk
Currency exposureUSD exposure affects European investors
Tax treatment in your countryWithholding tax, local capital gains rules — verify before investing

AFFO — Adjusted Funds From Operations — is the standard metric for measuring a REIT’s distributable cash flow. It adjusts FFO for recurring capital expenditure and is a better indicator of dividend sustainability than reported earnings.


Costs, Taxes and Currency Issues for European Investors


Currency: Most well-known individual REITs are US-listed and priced in USD. European investors buying USD assets face currency conversion costs on every purchase and sale, and their EUR returns are affected by EUR/USD movements. A strong EUR reduces the EUR-denominated return of USD assets.

Withholding tax on US dividends: Under most EU-US tax treaties, US dividend withholding tax is reduced from 30% to 15% for European investors who complete a W-8BEN form with their broker. The remaining tax may be creditable against local tax obligations depending on your country. Verify the rules for your specific country.

Local tax treatment: Capital gains and dividend income from REITs are taxed differently across Europe. In Portugal, capital gains are generally taxed at 28%. In Germany, a 25% flat rate applies. In Belgium, different rules apply for certain instruments. Tax treatment also varies depending on whether you hold a REIT ETF (accumulating or distributing) or individual REIT stocks. Always verify your local rules or consult a qualified tax professional.

Estate tax: For US-listed assets, US estate tax may apply to non-US persons above certain thresholds depending on account structure and personal situation. This is a relatively uncommon concern for most retail investors but worth being aware of at larger portfolio sizes.
Broker access: Not all European brokers provide easy access to all US-listed REITs. Check that your broker supports the specific tickers you want to buy, with reasonable FX conversion costs. See our guide on Best Brokers for European Investors →

This is general information only. Tax rules change and vary by country. Verify your specific situation with a qualified professional.


When a REIT ETF May Be the Better Choice


A REIT ETF is likely the better choice if you:

  • Want simple real estate exposure without analysing individual companies
  • Are still learning about REIT sectors and want to start simply
  • Have a smaller portfolio and prefer not to concentrate in individual stocks
  • Want to avoid overcomplicating your portfolio
  • Prefer a more passive, low-maintenance approach
  • Are not comfortable with USD currency risk at the individual company level
  • Want to avoid the complexity of multiple dividend tax events

For most beginners, starting with a REIT ETF — if any real estate exposure is wanted at all — is more appropriate than jumping straight into individual REITs.


When Individual REITs May Be the Better Choice


Individual REITs may be the better choice if you:

  • Want full control over which sectors and companies you own
  • Are willing to read financial reports and understand REIT metrics
  • Understand the differences between REIT sectors
  • Are comfortable with USD currency exposure and withholding tax
  • Can build a diversified portfolio across multiple sectors
  • Are able to monitor holdings over time and react to material changes
  • Accept that individual companies can cut dividends or underperform
  • Have already built a solid ETF core and want a more precise satellite allocation

Individual REITs reward investors who do the work. They penalise investors who buy based on dividend yield alone without understanding the underlying business.


Common Mistakes European Investors Make With REITs

MistakeWhy it can hurtBetter approach
Buying REITs only for high dividend yieldHigh yield can signal an unsustainable payout or a struggling businessCheck AFFO payout ratio and dividend history before buying
Ignoring debtHighly leveraged REITs are vulnerable when rates riseReview debt-to-equity ratio and debt maturity schedule
Ignoring interest-rate sensitivityREITs often fall when rates rise sharplyUnderstand the rate environment and each company’s debt structure
Buying only one REIT sectorSingle-sector concentration amplifies sector-specific riskDiversify across at least 3–4 sectors
Confusing REITs with physical propertyREITs are listed stocks — they are volatileTreat REITs as equities, not as property substitutes
Ignoring withholding taxReduces net dividend income significantlyComplete W-8BEN form and verify treaty rate for your country
Ignoring currency riskEUR/USD moves affect returns for European investorsSize USD exposure appropriately within your portfolio
Buying without reading financialsMisses key risks in debt, occupancy or managementAt minimum, read the latest earnings report and AFFO data
Assuming REIT ETFs are low riskREIT ETFs are still equity-like in volatilitySize the allocation appropriately — typically 5–15% of portfolio
Overweighting REITsToo much real estate concentration in a broader portfolioREITs should usually be a satellite, not the core
Copying a REIT list from social mediaLists are often outdated, US-only, or unsuitable for European investorsBuild your own watchlist based on understanding, not copying

Simple summary:

  • Choose a REIT ETF if you want simple, diversified real estate exposure with minimal research.
  • Choose individual REITs if you want control and are prepared to analyse sectors and companies.
  • Use both only if you understand the overlap and have a clear role for each.
  • Avoid REITs for now if you are still building your ETF core, do not understand REIT risks, or do not need real estate exposure.


Final Thoughts: Simple Exposure or More Control?


REIT ETFs and individual REITs solve different problems. Neither is universally better.

REIT ETFs are simpler, more diversified, and require less ongoing work. They are the right starting point for most investors who want real estate exposure without the complexity of picking individual companies.

Individual REITs offer more control, more sector precision, and potentially a clearer dividend profile per company — but they require analysis, diversification discipline, and a willingness to monitor holdings over time. They reward investors who understand sectors. They penalise investors who focus only on dividend yield.

For European investors specifically, the currency and tax dimension adds a layer of complexity to individual US REITs that does not exist with a UCITS ETF. This does not make individual REITs unsuitable — but it makes the homework more important.

REITs should usually complement a portfolio built on broad UCITS ETFs. They are not a replacement for diversified equity exposure — they are an addition with a specific purpose.

The right choice is the one that matches your strategy, knowledge, risk tolerance, and ability to stay consistent over time.


Frequently Asked Questions


Are REIT ETFs better than individual REITs for European investors?

Not always. REIT ETFs are simpler and diversified. Individual REITs offer more control. The better choice depends on your portfolio size, tax situation, goals and willingness to analyse companies.


Can European investors buy US REITs?

Yes. US REITs are listed on US exchanges and can be purchased through most European brokers that offer access to US markets. European investors should be aware of USD currency exposure, withholding tax on dividends (typically 15% under EU-US tax treaties with a W-8BEN form), and local tax treatment of foreign income.


Are US REITs better than European REITs?

Not necessarily. The US REIT market is broader, more liquid and more sector-diverse. European real estate securities can still make sense for EUR-aligned or Europe-focused exposure.


What is the easiest way to invest in REITs in Europe?

The easiest way is through a UCITS REIT ETF purchased via a regulated European broker. Examples to research include IWDP (iShares, distributing) and A4H5 (Amundi, accumulating, lowest TER at 0.24%). Always verify availability on your specific broker.

See our guide on Best ETFs for European Investors →


Are REIT ETFs UCITS?

Yes, the REIT ETFs mentioned in this guide are all UCITS-compliant and domiciled in Ireland or Luxembourg. This makes them accessible to EU retail investors and available through most European brokers.


Do REIT ETFs pay dividends?

It depends on the share class. The iShares IWDP distributes dividends quarterly. The Amundi A4H5 and Xtrackers D5BK are accumulating — dividends are reinvested automatically. For most European investors in the accumulation phase, accumulating ETFs are more tax-efficient.

See our guide on Accumulating vs Distributing ETF →


Are REITs good for income investors?

REITs can provide meaningful dividend income, but the income is not guaranteed. Dividends depend on occupancy, rent collection, debt costs, and company performance. REIT ETFs with distributing share classes provide regular distributions. Individual REITs allow you to select companies with specific dividend histories.


How much of a portfolio should be in REITs?

There is no universal rule. Many investors who include REITs treat them as a satellite allocation — typically 5% to 15% of total portfolio value. REITs already appear in broad global ETFs like VWCE and IWDA, so a separate REIT allocation increases real estate concentration deliberately.


Are REITs risky?

Yes. REITs are listed equities and behave like stocks in terms of short-term volatility. They are also sensitive to interest rates — when rates rise sharply, REITs often fall. Individual REITs carry company-specific risk on top of market and sector risk.


Should beginners buy individual REITs?

Generally no. Beginners are better served by understanding REIT ETFs first — what they hold, how they behave, and what role they play in a portfolio. Once comfortable with the basics, building a watchlist of individual REITs makes more sense. Jumping straight into individual company selection without sector knowledge often leads to poor decisions.


Can I use both REIT ETFs and individual REITs?

Yes, but only if you understand the overlap and have a clear purpose for each. For example: a REIT ETF for broad diversified exposure, plus one or two individual REITs in sectors you understand well. Combining both without a clear rationale adds complexity without clear benefit.



This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. ETF taxation rules change over time and vary by country. Always consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your situation.

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