30 Days Plan

Start Investing in 30 Days

One month to go from zero to invested. Learn the fundamentals, open the right accounts, and make your first purchase — action over perfection.

Free for 7 days. No credit card required.

No credit card required

Your Plan

Timeline
Learn BasicsOpen & FundBuild & GrowDone
1

Learn Basics

Weeks 1–2

Understand stocks, bonds, ETFs
Learn about retirement accounts
Choose a brokerage
2

Open & Fund

Weeks 3–4

Open brokerage and IRA accounts
Make first investment
Set up auto-contributions
3

Build & Grow

Months 2–6

Diversify across asset classes
Increase contributions quarterly
Rebalance portfolio

The Plan

30 Days plan

16 tasks across 4 milestones — 3–5/week

1

Learn the Fundamentals

Days 1–7
  • Learn how stocks, bonds, ETFs, and index funds work
  • Understand compound growth and why time matters
  • Learn the difference between retirement accounts (401k, IRA) and brokerage
  • Study the basics of asset allocation and diversification
2

Choose Your Strategy

Days 8–14
  • Determine your investment timeline and risk tolerance
  • Choose your initial strategy (index funds, target-date fund, or robo-advisor)
  • Select a brokerage platform (Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab)
  • Calculate how much you can invest monthly
3

Open Accounts & Invest

Days 15–22
  • Open your brokerage and/or IRA account
  • Make your first investment purchase
  • Contribute to your 401(k) up to employer match if available
  • Set up automatic monthly contributions
4

Automate & Plan

Days 23–30
  • Verify all automatic contributions are running
  • Set a calendar reminder for quarterly portfolio check
  • Write down your investment policy (what you own, why, when you'll sell)
  • Plan your next learning topics (tax optimization, advanced strategies)

Obstacles

What gets in the way

Common challenges and how to overcome them

Challenge

Fear of losing money in the stock market

Solution

The plan teaches you that historically, the S&P 500 has never lost money over any 20-year period. Diversified, long-term investing is how regular people build wealth. Time in the market beats timing the market.

Challenge

Analysis paralysis — too many investment options

Solution

Start with a single total market index fund (like VTI or VTSAP). The plan builds from this simple foundation, adding complexity only as you learn more.

Challenge

Thinking you need a lot of money to start

Solution

Most brokerages have no minimums. You can buy fractional shares for $1. The plan starts small and builds — consistency matters more than initial amount.

Challenge

Not understanding retirement accounts vs. brokerage accounts

Solution

The plan explains the difference clearly: 401(k) and IRA first (tax advantages), brokerage account second (flexibility). You'll know exactly which accounts to open and in what order.

Challenge

Checking your portfolio daily and panic-selling during dips

Solution

The plan teaches you to automate and ignore. Set up auto-contributions and check quarterly at most. Emotional reactions destroy more returns than bad investments.

10.7%

average annual S&P 500 return since 1926

$0

minimum to open most brokerage accounts today

$1.1M

result of investing $500/month for 30 years at 10% return

55%

of American adults currently own stock investments

FAQ

Common questions

You can start with as little as $1. Many brokerages offer fractional shares. What matters is starting and being consistent — even $50/month grows significantly over decades.

A total market index fund (like VTI or FSKAX) or a target-date retirement fund. These give you instant diversification across thousands of stocks. Simple and effective.

Robo-advisors (Betterment, Wealthfront) are great for beginners who want a hands-off approach. They auto-diversify and rebalance for a small fee. The plan covers DIY and robo-advisor approaches.

If your employer matches 401(k) contributions, contribute enough to get the full match first (it's free money). Then max your IRA. Then go back to the 401(k).

Market dips are opportunities to buy at lower prices. Dollar-cost averaging (investing the same amount regularly) means you naturally buy more shares when prices are low.

After you have a $1,000 emergency buffer and no high-interest debt (above 7%). The sooner you start, the more time compound growth has to work. Every year you wait costs you significantly.

Ready to start investing in 30 days?

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Free for 7 days. No credit card required.