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Investing

How to Start Investing in Your 20s: A Beginner's Guide

By Pennie at FiscallyAI • Updated • 8 min read

| FiscallyAI Skip to main content
Not personalized financial, legal, or tax advice.
General

By FiscallyAI Editorial • Updated • 5 min read

⚡ Your Biggest Advantage: Time

Investing $300/month starting at 22 gives you $1.1 million at 65. Starting at 32 gives you $540,000. That 10-year head start is worth $560,000. Start now, even if it’s small.

Compound Interest Calculator →

Why Your 20s Are Critical

Your 20s are the most powerful decade for building wealth. Not because you have a lot of money (you probably don’t), but because you have time. Compound interest over 40+ years turns small, consistent investments into life-changing sums.

Every year you wait costs you. Not investing in your 20s is the most expensive mistake you can make. As you invest, track your net worth to see your progress over time.

The Investing Order of Operations

  1. Get your 401(k) match: Free money from your employer
  2. Pay off high-interest debt: Credit cards (18%+ interest beats any investment)
  3. Build a small emergency fund: $1,000 minimum, 3 months ideal
  4. Max your Roth IRA: $7,000/year into tax-free growth
  5. Max your 401(k): Up to $23,500/year
  6. Taxable brokerage: Additional investing beyond retirement accounts

Step 1: Get the Free Money (401(k) Match)

If your employer offers a 401(k) match, contribute enough to get the full match. This is a 100% return on your money, and you won’t find that anywhere else.

Example: Your employer matches 50% up to 6% of salary. You make $50,000. Contribute 6% ($3,000), employer adds $1,500. That’s $4,500 invested with only $3,000 from you.

Step 2: Open a Roth IRA

A Roth IRA is ideal for young investors. You contribute after-tax money, it grows tax-free, and you withdraw tax-free in retirement.

  • Contribution limit: $7,000/year in 2026
  • Best providers: Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab (all have no-fee IRAs)
  • Key benefit: You can withdraw your contributions anytime, penalty-free

→ Read more: Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA

Step 3: Choose Simple Investments

You don’t need to pick individual stocks. In fact, most people shouldn’t. Index funds give you instant diversification with minimal effort.

Option A: Target-Date Fund (Simplest)

A target-date fund automatically adjusts your investments over time. Pick one with a year close to when you’ll turn 65 (e.g., “Target Date 2065 Fund”). Done.

Option B: Three-Fund Portfolio (Slightly more control)

Fund TypeAllocationExample
US Total Stock Market60%VTSAX, FZROX, SWTSX
International Stock Market30%VTIAX, FTIHX, SWISX
Total Bond Market10%VBTLX, FXNAX, SWAGX

Step 4: Automate Everything

The biggest enemy of investing is yourself. Remove the decision:

  • Set up automatic 401(k) contributions from your paycheck
  • Set up automatic monthly transfers to your Roth IRA
  • Set up automatic investment purchases

Once it’s automated, you don’t have to think about it. You just build wealth in the background. This approach is called dollar-cost averaging, and it’s one of the most effective strategies for long-term investors.

Step 5: Ignore the Noise

The market will go up. The market will go down. Financial news will scream about crashes and bubbles. Ignore all of it.

  • Don’t check your portfolio daily (monthly or quarterly is plenty)
  • Don’t sell during market drops
  • Don’t try to time the market
  • Keep contributing regardless of what the market is doing

How Much Should You Invest?

Start with whatever you can afford. $50/month is better than $0. As your income grows, increase your contributions.

Monthly InvestmentAt 65 (7% return)
$100$370,000
$300$1.1 million
$500$1.85 million
$1,000$3.7 million

Assumes starting at 22, 7% average annual return.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Waiting until you have “enough”: Start with $50. Waiting is expensive.
  2. Day trading: You’re not a hedge fund. Buy and hold index funds.
  3. Selling in panic: Every crash has recovered. Stay the course.
  4. Picking individual stocks: Most professional stock pickers underperform the market.
  5. High-fee funds: Expense ratios should be under 0.5%, ideally under 0.1%.

Investing vs Paying Off Debt

Debt TypeInterest RatePriority
Credit Cards18-24%Pay off FIRST
Personal Loans6-15%Pay off before investing
Student Loans3-7%Split (invest + pay down)
Mortgage5-7%Invest first, pay minimum

Rule of thumb: Pay off debt with interest rates above 7% before aggressively investing.

Getting Started Checklist

  • ☐ Check if your employer offers a 401(k) match
  • ☐ Set up 401(k) contributions to get the full match
  • ☐ Open a Roth IRA at Fidelity, Vanguard, or Schwab
  • ☐ Choose a target-date fund or 3-fund portfolio
  • ☐ Set up automatic monthly contributions
  • ☐ Increase contributions with every raise

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only. All investments carry risk, including loss of principal. Past performance doesn’t guarantee future results. Not financial advice. See our full disclaimer.