How much money do you need to start investing in ETFs?
The honest answer is: less than most people think — sometimes the price of one coffee. The catch is that the amount matters less than whether you can leave it untouched for years.
👉 Change the numbers above — it’s your money, your assumptions.
The real number is smaller than you think
You do not need thousands. Many brokers now let you buy a slice of an ETF instead of a whole unit — this is called a fractional share. So if one unit costs €90, you can still put in €10 and own a small piece of it.
On top of that, lots of platforms offer a savings plan: you set a small amount, say €25 a month, and it buys automatically. Many start around €1 to €25.
The catch: low entry does not mean low risk. The value still rises and falls. And tiny amounts grow slowly at first — the point early on is the habit, not the size.
Why steady often beats big
Imagine two people. One waits years to save a big lump sum. The other quietly puts in €25 every month, starting now. The second person is often further ahead — not because they had more money, but because their money had more time.
Time is the quiet engine here. When you use an The fund automatically reinvests dividends back into itself, so your holding grows without cash payouts. More → fund, any income is put back to work for you automatically. Small, regular, and early tends to do a lot of the heavy lifting.
Honest note: time helps, but it is not a promise. Markets fall as well as rise, and a long stretch can still end on a down year.
What this means for you
Before the amount, check three things. One: keep an emergency cushion — cash you can reach fast for a broken boiler or a lost job. Investing money you might need next month is how people get forced to sell at a bad moment.
Two: only invest money you can leave alone for years. The ups and downs smooth out over long stretches, not short ones.
Three: watch the The yearly running cost of the fund, shown as a % of your money. €0.20 per €100 a year at 0.20%. Lower is cheaper. More → — on small amounts a flat trading cost can sting more than it looks. This is a principle, not advice: we are not telling you to buy anything.
