You don't need thousands to start investing. You need $100 and a plan. This guide walks you through exactly how to turn that first $100 into a real portfolio — even if you just arrived in the US, don't have a big paycheck, and nobody in your family has ever owned stocks before.
We built The Irola for people like you: immigrants, first-generation Americans, and anyone who wants financial clarity without Wall Street jargon. Let's break it down.
Why $100 Is Enough to Start
In 2026, brokerages offer fractional shares. That means you can own a slice of Apple, Amazon, or the entire S&P 500 with as little as $1. Gone are the days of saving up thousands before you can invest.
The real question isn't how much you start with. It's how consistently you keep going. $100 invested every month at an 8% average annual return grows to $149,000 after 30 years. Start with one Benjamin. Just start.
The 3 Accounts Every Beginner Actually Needs
1. High-Yield Savings Account (HYSA) — Your Emergency Cushion
Before you invest a single dollar, park 1 month of expenses in a high-yield savings account. In 2026, accounts like Ally Bank, Marcus by Goldman Sachs, or Wealthfront Cash pay around 4-5% APY with zero risk and full FDIC protection.
This is not investing — it's insurance. When your car breaks down or you get laid off, this cushion keeps you from pulling money out of your stocks at the worst possible moment.
2. Roth IRA — Your Tax-Free Retirement Account
If you earned income in the US last year, you can contribute up to $7,000 to a Roth IRA in 2026. The magic: every dollar you make in this account is tax-free forever.
Open one at Fidelity, Charles Schwab, or Vanguard. All three have zero fees and zero minimums. For immigrants with a valid SSN or ITIN, the process takes about 10 minutes online.
3. Taxable Brokerage Account — For Medium-Term Goals
This is the account you use for everything that isn't retirement: buying a house in 5 years, sending money home for a family project, building a cushion to start your own business.
Same brokerages work here. No contribution limits. You pay capital gains tax when you sell — but only on profits.
Where to Open Your First Account
We get asked this constantly: "Fidelity vs Schwab vs Robinhood vs M1?" Here's the short answer:
- Fidelity — Best for most people. Zero fees, excellent app, free index funds, and rock-solid customer service.
- Charles Schwab — Nearly identical to Fidelity. Better international transfer tools if you send money abroad.
- Robinhood — Good for learning. Avoid it if you're prone to emotional trading — it's designed like a game for a reason.
- M1 Finance — Best for automated "pie" investing. Set your target allocation once, deposit monthly, and M1 auto-invests for you.
For a first account, Fidelity is our default recommendation.
What to Buy with Your First $100
Ignore individual stocks for now. Your first $100 goes into broad market index funds. Here are the three that 90% of professional financial advisors would recommend to their own kids:
FXAIX — Fidelity S&P 500 Index Fund
This single fund owns a piece of the 500 largest public companies in the US (Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and 496 others). Expense ratio: 0.015%. That means for every $10,000 you invest, you pay $1.50 a year in fees. It doesn't get cheaper than that.
FZROX — Fidelity Total Market Index Fund
Same idea, wider net. Owns roughly 3,000 US companies (small, mid, and large). Expense ratio: 0%. Literally zero.
FZILX — Fidelity Zero International Index
For global exposure. Owns shares in companies across Europe, Asia, and emerging markets. Expense ratio: 0%.
A simple beginner portfolio: 70% FZROX + 30% FZILX. That's it. You now own a piece of every major company on Earth.
The Compound Interest Math (This Is the Real Magic)
Here's what most people miss: time matters more than amount.
- Invest $100/month from age 25 to 65 at 8% → $349,000
- Invest $200/month from age 35 to 65 at 8% → $298,000
- Invest $500/month from age 45 to 65 at 8% → $295,000
The 25-year-old investing $100/month ends up with more than the 45-year-old investing 5x as much. Starting today — even with $100 — is worth more than waiting until you "have more money."
5 Mistakes That Kill Immigrant Investors
- Waiting until you have "enough" to start. You'll never feel like you have enough. Start with $25 if you have to.
- Checking your portfolio every day. It will go down sometimes. That's normal. Check quarterly, not daily.
- Sending every extra dollar home before investing. You can do both. $100 to family, $100 to your future self.
- Buying individual stocks you heard about on social media. If your cousin's friend has a "hot tip," they don't. Stick to index funds.
- Panic-selling during a crash. Every crash in US history has been followed by a recovery. Don't sell when the market is red.
Next Steps: What to Do This Week
- Today: Open a Fidelity account online (10 min).
- This week: Link your checking account and transfer $100.
- Next week: Buy $70 of FZROX and $30 of FZILX.
- Set up: Automatic monthly transfer of whatever you can afford — even $25/month works.
- Forget: About it for 3 months. Come back. Check. Repeat.
FAQ
Do I need an SSN to invest in the US?
Most brokerages require an SSN. A valid ITIN works at some firms (Charles Schwab is historically most ITIN-friendly). If you're on a student visa or work visa with an SSN, you're fully eligible.
Can I invest if I'm sending money home every month?
Yes. The two aren't mutually exclusive. Even $25/month invested beats zero. You're not choosing between family and future — you're doing both.
What if the market crashes?
It will, at some point. The S&P 500 has recovered from every single crash in history, usually within 1-3 years. Don't sell during a crash — that's when you buy more, not less.
Should I pay off debt or invest first?
Pay off high-interest debt (anything above 7% APR — credit cards especially) before investing. For low-interest debt (student loans, mortgages), do both simultaneously.
Is Robinhood safe?
It's legit and SIPC-insured. But its app design encourages bad habits (day trading, checking constantly). Fidelity is built for long-term investors.
Financial Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. All investing involves risk, including potential loss of principal. Consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.