How to Start Investing with $100: Beginner’s Guide (2026)

April 30, 2026

I started investing with almost nothing. No financial background. No fancy education. Just $100 and a lot of questions. That was a few years ago. Today I have a diversified portfolio across index funds and ETFs. It all started with $100 in a Fidelity account.

Here’s the guide I wish I had when I started.

The Myth That Stops People

“I need $1,000 to start.” Wrong. “I need to understand the market first.” Wrong. “I need to pick the right stocks.” Very wrong.

You can start with $100. You don’t need to understand everything. And you don’t need to pick stocks — index funds do it for you. The only thing you need is to actually start.

The Math: Why Starting Early Matters More Than the Amount

$100
Starting amount
10%
Avg annual return (S&P 500)
30 yrs
Time horizon
$1,744
Final value, no extra contributions

That’s 17x your money just by starting. But the real power comes from adding consistently:

Monthly contribution Total invested (30yr) Final value (10% avg) Compound growth
$50/month $18,000 ~$100,000 +$82,000
$100/month $36,000 ~$198,000 +$162,000
$200/month $72,000 ~$395,000 +$323,000

The amount matters less than the habit and the time. Every year you wait costs you more than you’d think.

Step 1: Open a Brokerage Account (10 Minutes)

Broker Minimum Fees Best for
Fidelity $0 $0 Beginners, index funds
Vanguard $0 $0 Long-term investors
Charles Schwab $0 $0 Advanced tools, branches
Robinhood $0 $0 Mobile-first, simple UI

My recommendation: Fidelity. Simple interface, excellent customer service, and their index funds have some of the lowest fees available. Go to fidelity.com, open an Individual Brokerage account. Takes about 10 minutes.

Step 2: Buy an Index Fund — Not Individual Stocks

This is where most beginners go wrong. They try to pick individual stocks. Don’t. Buy an index fund instead — a basket of 500+ stocks that tracks the market. You get a tiny piece of Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and hundreds of others in one purchase.

Fund Ticker Tracks Fee Min
Fidelity S&P 500 FXAIX 500 largest US companies 0.03% $1
Vanguard S&P 500 VOO 500 largest US companies 0.03% $1
Fidelity Total Market FSKAX 3,500+ US companies 0.03% $1
Vanguard Total Market VTI 3,500+ US companies 0.03% $1

I use FXAIX. It tracks the 500 largest US companies at 0.03% in fees, and Fidelity lets you buy fractional shares — so $100 buys you a tiny piece of all 500 companies. Log into Fidelity, search FXAIX, buy $100 worth. You’re now an investor.

Step 3: Set Up Automatic Monthly Contributions

This is the part that separates people who build real wealth from people who don’t. You don’t need to invest $1,000 at once. You need to invest $50–100 every month for 30 years.

Set up an automatic transfer from your checking account to your brokerage, then set up an automatic monthly purchase of FXAIX. This does a few things: you buy more shares when prices are low and fewer when they’re high (dollar-cost averaging), you remove the emotional decision-making, and you let compound growth do the work.

Even $25/month counts. The amount matters less than the consistency. A $25/month habit you stick to for 30 years will beat a $500 one-time investment every time.

What Not to Do

Don’t pick individual stocks. You’ll probably underperform the index. The research on this is overwhelming.

Don’t try to time the market. Even professional fund managers can’t do it reliably. Invest regularly regardless of what the market is doing.

Don’t panic sell when the market drops. Drops are normal — the S&P 500 has dropped 20%+ multiple times and always recovered. Selling locks in your losses.

Don’t ignore fees. A 1% annual fee sounds small. On $200,000 over 30 years, it costs you over $100,000 in lost growth. Stick to index funds under 0.10%.

Your 30-Year Timeline

Year Total invested ($100/mo) Portfolio value (10% avg) Growth
Year 1 $1,200 $1,320 +$120
Year 5 $6,000 $8,100 +$2,100
Year 10 $12,000 $21,000 +$9,000
Year 20 $24,000 $79,000 +$55,000
Year 30 $36,000 $198,000 +$162,000

Notice how the growth accelerates over time. The first 10 years feel slow. Years 20–30 are where the compounding really kicks in. That’s why starting now — even with $100 — beats waiting until you have more.


Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top