Investing feels like a big word. But it's just putting your money to work. You don't need to be a finance bro to start. You can begin with a single $100 bill.

Index funds are the perfect entry point. They're like buying a tiny piece of everything. No need to pick winners.

Key-Points
Why $100 Is Enough to Begin

Many platforms now let you buy fractional shares. This means you can own a slice of an index fund for as little as $1.

Starting now, even with a small amount, is better than waiting. Time in the market beats timing the market.

Step 1: Open a Brokerage Account

Think of a brokerage account as a special bank account for stocks. You put cash in, you buy stuff, you watch it grow. Opening one takes about 10 minutes.

You just need your phone and your ID. Pick a platform that feels easy to use. Most don't charge a dime to open or trade.

Table 1: Beginner-Friendly Brokerage Platforms for Gen Z
PlatformBest ForMin. to StartUnique Perk
FidelityAll-in-one banking$0No account fees, great research
SchwabBanking + investing$0Excellent customer service
RobinhoodPure simplicity$0Slick app, instant deposits
SoFi InvestActive social features$1Fractional shares, member events

Pick one that feels right. I personally like an app that doesn't scream at me with red numbers. You want something you can check on your couch without stress.

Sarah opened a Fidelity account during her lunch break. She linked her bank, and the app asked simple questions. It took 8 minutes. She funded it with $100 from her checking account right away.

Once your account is open, you link your bank. Then you transfer money. It feels like Venmo-ing yourself. The cash might take a day or two to settle.

Step 2: Pick a Low-Cost Index Fund

An index fund is a basket of stocks. One share owns a tiny bit of hundreds of companies. If one company has a bad day, you barely feel it.

Forget about picking the next Amazon. You buy the whole jungle. A fund that tracks the S&P 500 gives you 500 big American companies in one click.

Table 2: Top Index Funds for a First $100 Investment
Fund Name (Ticker)What It TracksExpense Ratio$100 Buys
Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO)500 largest U.S. companies0.03%$0.03 yearly fee
iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV)Same S&P 5000.03%$0.03 yearly fee
Schwab Total Stock Market (SWTSX)Entire U.S. stock market0.03%Mutual fund, $1 min
Fidelity ZERO Large Cap (FNILX)Large U.S. stocks0.00%Absolutely free to own

The "expense ratio" is just the tiny fee you pay to own the fund. You want this number as small as possible. 0.03% means you pay 3 cents per year for every $100.

Jake bought one share of VOO when he was 22. He didn't check it for a year. When he looked again, it had grown, and the dividends bought him a free burrito. He now adds $50 every month.

Look for an ETF or a mutual fund. An ETF trades like a stock. You can buy a fractional share with your $100.

Key-Points
The Cheaper, The Better

A fund with a 0.03% fee leaves way more money in your pocket than one with a 1% fee. Over 30 years, fees can eat tens of thousands of dollars.

Stick to funds that simply copy the market. They almost always beat the fancy, expensive ones run by humans.

Step 3: Set It and Forget It

This is the most powerful step. You want to automate your investment. Every week or month, your app pulls a set amount and buys your fund.

This kills two birds with one stone. You don't need to remember to invest. And you stop trying to guess the market's mood.

Table 3: Auto-Investing vs. Manual Investing
FeatureAuto-Invest (Recurring Buy)Manual Investing
Emotional stressVery low. You ignore the news.High. You panic when it's red.
ConsistencyPerfect. Every Friday like clockwork.Spotty. You might forget or wait.
Price you payAverage price over time (good thing).You might buy at the worst moment.
Best forLong-term wealth, peace of mind.Gamblers and full-time traders.

Set it up once. A recurring buy of $25 every Friday turns your $100 into $1,300 a year without you lifting a finger. You won't miss a beer or two each week.

Maria set up a daily $3 auto-invest. She doesn't even notice the money leaving. She just watches her portfolio stack up like a snowball rolling downhill. It's the cheapest subscription she owns.

Don't panic when the market drops. Your $100 might turn into $85 for a while. That's a normal sale. Keep your auto-buy going, and you grab shares at a discount.

Compound interest is your genie. You earn returns on your returns. The longer your money sits, the harder it works.

Table 4: The Power of Starting Early with $100/Month
Starting AgeTotal Invested by 65Estimated Value at 65Growth You Miss By Waiting
20$54,000Over $250,000Baseline (you win big)
25$48,000Around $180,000You lose over $70,000
30$42,000Around $130,000You lose over $120,000
35$36,000Around $90,000You lose over $160,000

This table shows a modest 7% average return, which is normal for the stock market over long periods. The numbers are not exact, but the lesson is solid. Waiting is costly.

Key-Points
Boring Is Beautiful

The best portfolio is one you can ignore. Don't trade. Don't chase hot tips from TikTok. Just buy the whole market and go live your life.

A bear market (when prices fall) is a gift to a young investor. You get to buy more shares for the same amount of cash.

Key Takeaways

Key PointWhat It MeansAction Item
Start Now, No Excuses$100 is perfect. Waiting costs you potential compound growth.Open a brokerage account this week.
Fees Are Your EnemyA 0.03% fee vs a 1% fee can cost you six figures over a lifetime.Stick to low-cost S&P 500 or total market funds.
Automate EverythingHumans are emotional and bad at timing. Robots are steady.Set up a recurring investment of any amount you won't miss.
Don't Touch the DialThe market goes up and down. Selling when it's down locks in losses.Check your balance once a year, not once a day.
It's Not a GameInvesting is a slow marathon. It's not meant to be exciting.Focus on your career and hobbies, not stock tickers.