Acorns rounds up your spare change and invests it. Betterment is a full-featured robo-advisor. Here's how to pick the right one for where you are financially.
Acorns and Betterment are both robo-advisors, but they’re built for very different investors. Acorns is designed to make investing effortless for people who struggle to save — it rounds up your spare change and invests it automatically. Betterment is a full-featured robo-advisor built for people who are ready to invest intentionally and maximize returns.
Which one is right for you depends almost entirely on where you are financially. Here’s the honest breakdown.
| Feature | Acorns | Betterment |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly fee | $1–$3/mo (flat) | 0.25%/yr (~$2.08/mo per $10K) |
| Minimum to invest | $0 | $0 ($10 to start) |
| Round-Up investing | Yes — core feature | No |
| Tax-loss harvesting | No | Yes |
| IRA match | Yes (up to 3%) | No |
| Human advisors | No | Yes (Premium) |
| Custodial (kids) accounts | Yes | No |
| Joint/Trust accounts | No | Yes |
| Crypto | No | Yes |
| Best for | Beginners, passive savers | Intentional investors |
This is the most important factor and it’s not obvious at first glance.
Acorns charges a flat monthly subscription: $1/mo (Bronze), $2/mo (Silver), or $3/mo (Gold). Simple. Predictable.
Betterment charges 0.25% per year — that’s a percentage of your balance, so the cost scales up as your portfolio grows.
The crossover point: at $14,400, both cost the same ($3/mo). Below that, Acorns costs more in percentage terms but less in raw dollars. Above that, Betterment is cheaper in absolute dollars.
If you have a small balance and plan to keep it there, Acorns wins on fees. As your portfolio grows, Betterment becomes significantly cheaper.
Winner: Acorns for small balances, Betterment for large ones.
Acorns’ signature feature is Round-Ups. Link your debit or credit cards and Acorns rounds every purchase up to the nearest dollar, sweeping the change into your investment account. Buy a $4.30 coffee and $0.70 goes to your portfolio.
It’s a clever way to invest without thinking about it. For people who know they should save but keep forgetting or spending, Round-Ups create a passive savings habit.
Betterment has no equivalent. It’s built for people who are ready to make deliberate contributions — set up auto-deposits, fund goals, build toward a target.
Winner: Acorns — if this is the feature that gets you investing, it’s worth a lot.
Tax-loss harvesting automatically sells positions at a loss to offset capital gains, reducing your tax bill. On a $100K portfolio in a high tax bracket, this can save hundreds or thousands per year.
Betterment does this automatically on all taxable accounts. Acorns doesn’t offer it at all.
If you have a meaningful taxable investment account ($20K+), this difference alone can outweigh everything else.
Winner: Betterment
Acorns Gold ($3/mo) includes an IRA match of up to 3% on IRA contributions. That’s free money — a $7,000 IRA contribution gets you $210 back. No other major robo-advisor offers anything like this.
If you’re maxing your Roth IRA annually, this feature alone could justify Acorns’ cost for some users.
Betterment offers no IRA match.
Winner: Acorns — unique in the robo-advisor space.
Both invest in diversified ETF portfolios, but Betterment gives you far more control.
Acorns offers five preset risk portfolios (Conservative, Moderately Conservative, Moderate, Moderately Aggressive, Aggressive). Acorns Gold adds Custom Portfolios where you can adjust allocations. Simple and hands-off.
Betterment offers a core diversified portfolio, Goldman Sachs Smart Beta, flexible portfolios (adjust individual ETF weights), crypto portfolios, and multiple SRI/ESG options. It’s a full-featured investment platform.
Winner: Betterment
Acorns offers individual taxable accounts and IRAs (plus custodial accounts for kids on the Gold plan). No joint accounts, no trust accounts.
Betterment offers individual taxable, IRAs, joint accounts, and trust accounts. More flexibility for complex financial situations.
Winner: Betterment for most adults. Acorns wins if you want a kids/custodial account.
Starting out with under $5,000 and trouble saving consistently? Acorns. The Round-Ups and flat fee make it the right tool to build the habit. The IRA match sweetens the deal.
Have a growing portfolio and want to optimize returns? Betterment. Tax-loss harvesting, more portfolio options, and a lower percentage fee at scale make it the stronger long-term platform.
Both are solid. Neither will make a bad investment. The question is which one will actually keep you invested.
Want a deeper look? Read our full Acorns review or Betterment review. Also see: Betterment vs Wealthfront and Acorns vs Wealthfront vs Betterment.