I'm not much older than you but I've been in the finance world for some time now and give the following advice when friends ask.
1.) You don't need a broker or someone you have to pay to manage your money.
2.) Your outlook should be one of set it and forget it. That is, you don't want this money to be money you need on day to day basis. This is money you want to set aside and let it work for you. And you need to be OK with being apart from that money for some time in order to realize actual growth.
3.) Find a platform that suits you and doesn't hit with crazy fees and has a minimum deposit you can handle. Something like E-Trade, Merrill Edge, TDAmeritrade, etc. Open an IRA through whatever platform you choose. Google IRAs first to make sure it's something you want and understand the basic rules.
4.) Find some high growth funds. Vanguard US Growth, Fidelity blue chip, TRowe Cap, etc. All these guys generally invest in the same stuff so don't split hairs over which fund. Google some and read about it and pick ones that suit you. Consider setting up smaller recurring contributions that coincide with when you get paid. Again, only do what you can afford to part with.
4.a) Or you could use the auto-advisor service that some of these things offer - some may charge for this so careful here. The goal would be to pick growth given your age and the current market climate, should it hold.
5.) In addition to mutual funds, consider looking at blue chip stocks that perform consistently and have 2-5% dividend yield. Things like Coke, Duke, 3M, IBM etc. Throw some money in those and set those puppies to reinvest the dividends and you'll realize growth that way as well. I always include this bit about stocks in the event you hit the maximum deposit for an IRA - 6k for someone your age for 2021. So if you plan on investing more than 6k, consider stocks in just a basic account through the same platform.
**DISCLOSURE** I'm not a financial advisor. I'm a software developer that works in finance and have many broker friends.
1.) You don't need a broker or someone you have to pay to manage your money.
2.) Your outlook should be one of set it and forget it. That is, you don't want this money to be money you need on day to day basis. This is money you want to set aside and let it work for you. And you need to be OK with being apart from that money for some time in order to realize actual growth.
3.) Find a platform that suits you and doesn't hit with crazy fees and has a minimum deposit you can handle. Something like E-Trade, Merrill Edge, TDAmeritrade, etc. Open an IRA through whatever platform you choose. Google IRAs first to make sure it's something you want and understand the basic rules.
4.) Find some high growth funds. Vanguard US Growth, Fidelity blue chip, TRowe Cap, etc. All these guys generally invest in the same stuff so don't split hairs over which fund. Google some and read about it and pick ones that suit you. Consider setting up smaller recurring contributions that coincide with when you get paid. Again, only do what you can afford to part with.
4.a) Or you could use the auto-advisor service that some of these things offer - some may charge for this so careful here. The goal would be to pick growth given your age and the current market climate, should it hold.
5.) In addition to mutual funds, consider looking at blue chip stocks that perform consistently and have 2-5% dividend yield. Things like Coke, Duke, 3M, IBM etc. Throw some money in those and set those puppies to reinvest the dividends and you'll realize growth that way as well. I always include this bit about stocks in the event you hit the maximum deposit for an IRA - 6k for someone your age for 2021. So if you plan on investing more than 6k, consider stocks in just a basic account through the same platform.
**DISCLOSURE** I'm not a financial advisor. I'm a software developer that works in finance and have many broker friends.