Opening a brokerage account takes ten minutes and $0 minimum at every major US broker. The gap between having an account and trading sensibly is what this guide closes.
Setting Up Right
Choose a regulated broker (SIPC-insured in the US — see our Top 10 Trading Platforms), fund via ACH, and start with fractional shares: $25 buys a slice of any company, making diversification possible from day one. Cash accounts avoid the complexity and risk of margin while learning; you can upgrade later, and most people never need to.
Order Types That Matter
Market orders execute immediately at the best available price — fine for liquid large-caps, dangerous for thin stocks. Limit orders set your maximum buy (or minimum sell) price and simply don't fill beyond it — the professional default. Stop-losses trigger a sale at a set level; useful, but know they become market orders when triggered and can fill below the stop in fast markets.
The Classic Beginner Errors
Concentrating in one hyped stock, checking prices hourly, selling the first dip, and confusing a bull market for skill are the canonical mistakes. The counter-habits: position sizes small enough to hold through 30% drawdowns, a written reason for every purchase, and measuring yourself against 'what if I'd just bought an index fund' — the benchmark most active traders quietly lose to.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much money do I need to start?
Technically $1 with fractional shares. Practically, whatever amount you can invest without needing it back for years — the sum matters less than the habit.
Which broker should a beginner pick?
Fidelity or Schwab for the full-service path; Robinhood or Public for the mobile-first path. See our Top 10 Trading Apps for Beginners ranking for current testing.