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How to Build Your First Investment Portfolio (A Step-by-Step Guide)

You don’t need a financial advisor to build a solid investment portfolio. With 2–4 low-cost ETFs and a simple allocation strategy, you can create a globally diversified portfolio that outperforms most actively managed funds. Here’s exactly how to do it — from choosing your asset allocation to automating your contributions and rebalancing once a year.

What a portfolio actually is

A portfolio is simply the collection of all your investments. If you own three ETFs and two individual stocks, that’s your portfolio. The goal of building a portfolio — rather than just buying random stocks — is to create a mix of assets that balances growth potential with the level of risk you’re comfortable with.

Good portfolio construction isn’t about picking the hottest stocks. It’s about diversification, asset allocation, and consistency. Here’s how to do it right from the start.

Step 1: Decide your asset allocation

Asset allocation is the single most important investment decision you’ll make. It determines what percentage of your money goes into stocks, bonds, and cash. Research consistently shows that asset allocation accounts for over 90% of portfolio performance variation over time — far more than individual stock selection.

A simple rule of thumb: subtract your age from 110 to get your stock allocation percentage. The rest goes to bonds.

Your ageStocksBondsRisk level
2585%15%Aggressive
3575%25%Growth
4565%35%Moderate
5555%45%Conservative
6545%55%Income-focused

This is a starting point, not a rule. If you have a high risk tolerance and a long time horizon, you might go 100% stocks in your 20s. If market volatility keeps you up at night, add more bonds regardless of age.

Step 2: Choose your holdings

For most people, a portfolio of 2–4 low-cost index ETFs covers everything you need. Here are three proven portfolio models:

The One-Fund Portfolio

The Two-Fund Portfolio

The Three-Fund Portfolio (Classic Boglehead)

Not sure which ETFs to pick? Our VOO vs VTI comparison breaks down the most popular options, and our ETF guide explains everything from scratch.

Step 3: Open the right account

Where you hold your portfolio matters almost as much as what’s in it, because of taxes:

The priority order: employer match → Roth IRA → max 401(k) → taxable brokerage.

Step 4: Invest and automate

Once you’ve chosen your allocation and opened your account, it’s time to actually buy. Here’s the process:

$200/mo — Three-Fund Portfolio
$452,000
After 30 years at 9% avg return
$500/mo — Three-Fund Portfolio
$1,130,000
After 30 years at 9% avg return
$1,000/mo — Three-Fund Portfolio
$2,260,000
After 30 years at 9% avg return

Step 5: Rebalance annually

Over time, your portfolio will drift from your target allocation. If stocks have a great year, they might grow from 80% to 88% of your portfolio, leaving bonds underweight. Rebalancing means selling some of the overweight asset and buying the underweight one to get back to your target.

Common beginner portfolio mistakes

Build and test your portfolio

Use PortfolioCalc to build a portfolio with any stocks or ETFs and project its growth using real historical data — with bear, base, and bull scenarios.

Open Portfolio Builder →

This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or tax advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Always consult a qualified financial adviser before making investment decisions.