Find your actual starting point
Most investing guides assume you're already ready. This quiz doesn't. It checks your debt load, savings buffer, account setup, and behavior — then tells you where on the path you actually stand.
Answer 7 honest questions about your money situation. We'll tell you exactly where you stand, what to do first, and which platform fits your starting point.
Most investing guides assume you're already ready. This quiz doesn't. It checks your debt load, savings buffer, account setup, and behavior — then tells you where on the path you actually stand.
Fidelity, M1 Finance, and Fundrise serve completely different investors. Your result matches you to the platform that fits your situation right now — not the one with the best marketing.
Knowing you're ready to invest is only useful if you do something about it this week. Every result includes a concrete 7-day plan so your first move is clear — not just "someday."
Take the quiz now, find your starting point, and make one move this week.
Common questions about the quiz, the results, and how to use them.
No. This quiz is educational only. It is designed to help you understand your current financial situation and identify the most logical next step based on your answers — not replace advice from a licensed financial professional. Market returns are not guaranteed.
Because high-interest debt changes the math on investing entirely. A 24% APR credit card balance is a guaranteed 24% loss on every dollar that stays in it. No index fund can reliably beat that on a risk-adjusted basis. The quiz prioritizes debt elimination before investing recommendations for anyone carrying it — because that’s the mathematically correct sequence.
Yes — and dramatically so. $50 a month at 8% average annual return over 30 years grows to over $68,000. The amount matters far less than starting. Most platforms now allow you to begin with as little as $1 through fractional shares, and Fidelity and Schwab have zero account minimums. The habit and the time horizon matter more than the initial dollar amount.
Some recommendations use affiliate links, which may earn Beelinger a small commission if you open an account. This does not change the cost to you — all recommended platforms are free or no-minimum to open. Beelinger’s editorial standard is to only recommend platforms that genuinely match your result, not the ones with the highest commission.
Results are based on the pattern across all 7 answers, not a single question. If the result feels off, retake the quiz and pay particular attention to your answers on debt (Q1), emergency fund (Q2), and time horizon (Q5) — those three carry the most weight. The runner-up paths shown below your primary result may also feel like a closer fit.
It depends entirely on the interest rate. High-interest debt (credit cards, personal loans at 10%+): pay those first. Low-interest student loans under 6%: the market’s historical average return has outpaced that rate, so investing alongside paying them down is often the smarter move. The quiz accounts for this distinction — low-interest debt is treated differently than high-interest debt in the scoring.
Yes — and you should. Paying off debt, building your emergency fund, or opening a new account type all shift which path applies to you. Beelinger recommends revisiting this quiz every 6–12 months. Use the Retake button at the bottom of your results.