Your First Steps Into Investing

You’ve read about why investing matters, how compound interest works, and what waiting costs. Now you want to know what to actually do. This page is exactly that, a plain, practical guide to getting started.
It won’t take as long as you think. Most people can have an investment account open and a direct debit set up in under 30 minutes. Here’s how.
Step 1: Sort Your Financial Foundation First

Before you put a penny into investing, two things need to be in place. If they already are, great, move to Step 2. If not, these come first.
Clear any high-interest debt
If you have credit card debt, payday loans, or any borrowing with an interest rate above around 6-7%, pay that off before investing. The reason is simple: it’s almost impossible to earn a consistent investment return that beats a 22% credit card interest rate. Paying off the debt is the guaranteed return. Once the expensive debt is gone, you can invest freely.
Build an emergency fund
Keep three to six months of essential expenses, rent or mortgage, bills, food, transport, in an easy-access savings account. This is your financial safety net. It means if something goes wrong, you don’t have to sell your investments at exactly the wrong moment.
An easy-access cash ISA or a regular savings account at your bank works fine for this. The goal is accessibility and security, not growth.
Step 2: Decide How Much You Can Invest
There’s no minimum that makes investing worthwhile. Even £25 or £50 a month invested consistently will grow into something significant over decades. The amount matters far less than the habit.
A useful starting point is to look at your monthly income and outgoings and find a number that feels slightly uncomfortable, not painful, but not trivially easy either. That’s usually in the right ballpark. You can always adjust it later.
| The direct debit approach Set up your investment contribution as a direct debit that goes out on payday, before you have a chance to spend it. This is called paying yourself first, and it’s the single most effective habit long-term investors share. You stop noticing the money is gone after a couple of months. |
Step 3: Choose the Right Account Wrapper

In the UK, how you hold your investments matters almost as much as what you invest in, because the right account can shelter your returns from tax completely.
Stocks and Shares ISA, the first choice for most people
A Stocks and Shares ISA lets you invest up to £20,000 per tax year and pay zero tax on any growth or income. Forever. If your investments double in value inside an ISA, you owe nothing to HMRC. This is the most powerful tool available to UK investors, and it should be your starting point.
Pension / SIPP: for retirement money
If you’re investing specifically for retirement, a pension or Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP) gives you tax relief on contributions, meaning the government tops up what you put in. A basic-rate taxpayer investing £80 immediately has £100 invested after tax relief. That’s an instant 25% return before your money goes anywhere.
The trade-off is that you can’t touch the money until you’re 57 (rising to 58 in 2028). If you’re fine with that, the tax relief makes pensions extremely powerful for long-term wealth building.
General Investment Account, when you’ve used your ISA allowance
If you’ve maxed out your ISA allowance (£20,000/year is a high bar for most people), a General Investment Account lets you invest without limit. You’ll pay capital gains tax and income tax on returns above certain thresholds, but for most people this is a later consideration.
| Account Type | Key Facts |
| Stocks & Shares ISA | Tax-free growth and income. £20,000/year limit. Access money any time. Best starting point for most. |
| Pension / SIPP | Tax relief on contributions (government top-up). Can’t access until 57+. Best for dedicated retirement saving. |
| General Investment Account | No contribution limits. Taxable returns. Use once ISA allowance is maximised. |
| Junior ISA | For children under 18. £9,000/year limit. Tax-free. Can’t be accessed until child turns 18. |
Step 4: Pick a Platform
A platform is the service you use to actually hold and buy your investments. Think of it like a bank account, but for investments. You open an account with a platform, choose your account type (ISA, SIPP etc), and then decide what to invest in.
For a beginner investing in simple index funds, the main things to look for in a platform are:
- Low fees, both the platform charge and the fund charges
- Simple to use, you shouldn’t need a finance degree to navigate it
- Access to low-cost global index funds, specifically Vanguard or similar
- Regulated by the FCA and covered by the FSCS up to £85,000
Some platforms that work well for beginners in the UK include InvestEngine (very low cost, strong for passive investing), Trading 212 (user-friendly, good for starting small), and Vanguard’s own platform (slightly limited selection but extremely low cost if you’re investing in Vanguard funds). We have a full platform comparison in the UK Investing section.
| Affiliate disclosure Some links on this site to investment platforms are affiliate links, meaning we may earn a small referral fee if you open an account. This never affects what we say about any platform, and we only link to platforms we’d recommend regardless. You can also go directly to any platform without using our links. |
Step 5: Choose What to Invest In
This is the part most beginners find most daunting, and the good news is that the best answer is also the simplest one.
A single global index fund, one that tracks the performance of thousands of companies across the world, is a perfectly complete investment for the vast majority of people. It’s diversified, low cost, and has a strong long-term track record.
You don’t need to pick individual stocks. You don’t need multiple funds. You don’t need to watch the news or adjust your holdings based on what’s happening in the market. One fund, invested in regularly, left alone to grow.
| A concrete starting point Vanguard’s FTSE All-World ETF (ticker: VWRP) gives you exposure to over 3,500 companies across developed and emerging markets worldwide. The ongoing charge is 0.22% per year. It’s available on most UK platforms. Many experienced investors use nothing else. |
If you want slightly more detail on what index funds are and why they work so well, our page on what is an index fund covers it properly. If you want to understand why fund charges matter so much, read why fees destroy your returns.
Step 6: Set Up and Leave It Alone

Once your account is open, your account type is chosen, and your direct debit is set up to invest into a global index fund, you’re done. Genuinely.
The biggest risk now isn’t the market. It’s you. The urge to check your portfolio daily, to sell when it drops, to switch to something that’s been doing well recently, these are the behaviours that cost investors money. The research is consistent: the investors who do best are those who invest regularly and interfere the least.
| When markets fall, and they will At some point after you start investing, your portfolio will show a loss. Maybe a big one. This is normal, it is temporary, and it is not a reason to sell. Every major market fall in history has been followed by a recovery. The people who sell during crashes lock in their losses. The people who stay invested, or better still, keep investing, come out ahead. Prepare yourself mentally for this now, before it happens. |
A Checklist to Get Started
- Clear any debt with an interest rate above 6-7%
- Build an emergency fund of 3-6 months’ expenses in easy-access savings
- Decide on a monthly amount to invest, set it as a direct debit on payday
- Open a Stocks and Shares ISA on a low-cost platform
- Choose a low-cost global index fund (e.g. Vanguard FTSE All-World)
- Set up a regular investment into that fund
- Leave it alone and let it grow
| Not financial advice This page is educational guidance on the general steps involved in starting to invest in the UK. It is not tailored financial advice. Your personal circumstances, income, debts, tax position, goals, may mean a different approach suits you better. If you’re unsure, consider speaking to a qualified financial adviser. |
What Next?
You now have everything you need to make a start. If you want to go deeper on the mechanics before committing, the Fundamentals section covers index funds, fees, diversification, and risk in plain English. Or head straight to the UK Investing section for detailed guidance on ISAs, SIPPs, and platform comparisons.