The ETF themes dominating 2026 so far are defence, precious metals, and AI infrastructure, alongside the perennial core holdings in global and S&P 500 trackers. This guide covers the most widely watched UK-accessible UCITS ETFs across each category, with the current market context going into July 2026.
Three macro themes have shaped ETF performance and flows in 2026 more than any others. Defence spending has undergone a structural re-rating following NATO's 5% of GDP commitment, with European and global defence ETFs among the strongest performers of the year. Precious metals, particularly gold and silver, hit multi-year and all-time highs in early 2026 before a sharp correction in March and April, with gold mining ETFs among the top performers through February before giving back some gains. AI-related thematic ETFs continue to attract significant inflows, driven by the ongoing infrastructure buildout.
Against this backdrop, the core holdings that form the base of most UK investors' ETF portfolios, broad global equity and S&P 500 trackers, have also performed strongly. The FTSE 100's outperformance versus US indices year-to-date has renewed interest in UK equity ETFs after years of relative underperformance.
For most UK investors, the foundation of an ETF portfolio is a low-cost global equity or S&P 500 tracker held in an ISA. The following remain the most widely held and traded in this category:
For long-term ISA investors, the iShares MSCI World and Vanguard S&P 500 trackers remain the most widely used core ETF holdings in the UK. Both carry OCFs of 0.07%-0.22% and are ISA-eligible with deep secondary market liquidity. The choice between a global tracker and a US-only tracker is ultimately a decision about how much home-country concentration risk you are comfortable with in your index.
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The re-rating of European and global defence stocks following the NATO 5% of GDP commitment has been one of 2026's most consequential investment themes. Defence ETFs have attracted record inflows and several new funds have launched or gained significant traction with UK investors.
Gold hit all-time highs above $5,344 per troy ounce in early 2026 before a correction in March-April, recovering to around $4,700 by mid-June. Silver crossed $100 per ounce for the first time in January 2026. Both precious metals ETCs and mining equity ETFs were among the best-performing UK ETF categories in January and February 2026, before giving back gains in the April market correction. Gold mining ETFs delivered +7.8% year-to-date through to early May 2026, despite a sharp -22% drawdown in March-April, reflecting both the commodity price moves and company earnings growth.
Physical gold ETCs offer direct price exposure with low OCFs and ISA eligibility, making them the most practical gold allocation for UK retail investors. Mining equity ETFs like the Global X Silver Miners fund offer higher potential returns but considerably more volatility. Most investors treating precious metals as a portfolio hedge use physical ETCs rather than miners for their core allocation.
AI-related ETFs continued to attract strong inflows through 2026 as the infrastructure buildout expanded and enterprise deployment accelerated. The theme has broadened from the hardware-focused plays that dominated 2023-24 toward a wider set of beneficiaries including software, data centres and robotics.
The FTSE 100 has delivered a 12-month total return of approximately 18.5% to mid-June 2026, building on an exceptional 2025 in which the index returned 21.6% for the full year. This has renewed interest in dedicated UK equity ETFs among investors who want specific FTSE 100 exposure rather than the diluted allocation they receive in a global tracker. UK equities remain meaningfully underweighted in most global indices relative to their economic significance, which some investors view as an opportunity.
| ETF | Ticker | Category | OCF | Key characteristic |
| iShares Core MSCI World UCITS ETF | IWDA | Global equity (developed) | 0.20% | ~1,400 companies, 70% US; accumulating |
| Vanguard FTSE All-World UCITS ETF | VWRL | Global equity (all-world) | 0.22% | ~3,800 companies inc. emerging markets; distributing |
| Vanguard S&P 500 UCITS ETF | VUAG | US equity | 0.07% | S&P 500 tracker; lowest cost major global ETF |
| iShares Core S&P 500 UCITS ETF | CSP1 | US equity | 0.07% | S&P 500 tracker; Europe's largest UCITS ETF by AUM |
| VanEck Global Defence UCITS ETF | DFNS | Defence sector | 0.55% | Global defence equities; top UK inflows in 2026 |
| iShares Physical Gold ETC | IGLN | Gold (physical) | 0.12% | Physical gold bars; most liquid UK gold ETC |
| Global X Silver Miners UCITS ETF | SILV | Silver mining equity | 0.65% | High-beta silver play; satellite position only |
| WisdomTree Artificial Intelligence ETF | WTAI | AI thematic | 0.40% | Rules-based AI equity index; Nvidia heavy |
| iShares Core FTSE 100 UCITS ETF | ISF | UK equity | 0.07% | FTSE 100 tracker; distributing; ~3.1% yield |
The core/satellite framework remains the most practical way for UK investors to think about ETF portfolio construction. Core (global equity, S&P 500, FTSE 100 trackers): low cost, broad, long-term. Satellite (defence, gold, AI, silver miners): higher conviction, higher fee, shorter-term or thematic. The proportion allocated to each depends on risk appetite and investment horizon.
ETFs are generally lower-risk than individual shares due to their built-in diversification, but they are not risk-free. Key considerations include:
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