The Indian stock market has made many ordinary people wealthy over the last 20 years. The Sensex has grown from 3,000 in 2003 to 72,000+ in 2026 — that's a 24x return. But most beginners make costly mistakes in the first year. This guide will help you avoid them.
Step 1 — Open a Demat Account
You cannot buy stocks without a demat account. Open one free at Zerodha or Groww — takes 15 minutes online with just Aadhaar and PAN.
Read our complete guide: How to Open Demat Account in India 2026
Step 2 — Understand What You're Buying
When you buy a share of Reliance Industries, you own a tiny piece of Reliance. If Reliance profits grow, your share price rises. If profits fall, price falls.
Two ways to make money in stocks:
- Capital appreciation — buy at ₹100, sell at ₹200 = ₹100 profit per share
- Dividends — company shares profits with shareholders every year
Step 3 — Start with Index Funds, Not Individual Stocks
This is the most important advice for beginners. Instead of trying to pick winning stocks, buy a Nifty 50 index fund which automatically invests in India's top 50 companies.
Why index funds first:
- Nifty 50 has given ~14% CAGR over 20 years — better than 90% of active investors
- Zero research needed — just buy and hold
- Expense ratio as low as 0.10% — almost free
- Instant diversification across 50 companies
Use our SIP Calculator to see how ₹5,000/month in Nifty 50 grows over 20 years.
Step 4 — Learn the Basics Before Picking Stocks
Before buying individual company stocks, understand these key concepts:
P/E Ratio (Price to Earnings): How much you pay per rupee of company profit. Nifty 50 average P/E is ~22. Below 15 = possibly cheap. Above 40 = expensive.
Market Cap: Total value of all shares. Large cap = above ₹20,000 crore. Mid cap = ₹5,000-20,000 crore. Small cap = below ₹5,000 crore.
EPS (Earnings Per Share): Profit divided by number of shares. Growing EPS = healthy company.
Debt to Equity Ratio: How much debt vs shareholder money. Below 1 is generally safe. Above 3 = high debt risk.
ROE (Return on Equity): How efficiently company uses shareholder money. Above 15% is good. Above 20% is excellent.
Step 5 — How to Pick Good Stocks
The simple checklist for a good stock:
- ✅ Revenue growing for 5+ consecutive years
- ✅ Profit (net income) growing for 5+ years
- ✅ Low debt (debt-to-equity below 1)
- ✅ High ROE (above 15%)
- ✅ Strong brand or market leadership in its sector
- ✅ P/E ratio reasonable vs sector average
Where to research stocks: Screener.in (free), Tickertape.in (free), Zerodha Kite charts
Step 6 — Build a Diversified Portfolio
Never put all money in one stock. A good beginner portfolio:
| Allocation | What to Buy | Why |
|---|---|---|
| 50% | Nifty 50 Index Fund (SIP) | Safe, proven, automatic |
| 20% | 2-3 large cap stocks | Stable, dividend-paying |
| 20% | 1-2 mid cap stocks | Higher growth potential |
| 10% | 1 small cap stock | High risk, high reward |
Step 7 — Tax on Stock Market Gains
| Type | Holding Period | Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Short Term Capital Gain (STCG) | Less than 1 year | 20% |
| Long Term Capital Gain (LTCG) | More than 1 year | 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh |
| Dividends | Any time | As per your income tax slab |
Smart tax tip: Hold stocks for more than 1 year to pay only 12.5% LTCG instead of 20% STCG. First ₹1.25 lakh of LTCG is completely tax-free every year.
Mistakes Every Beginner Makes
- ❌ F&O Trading — SEBI data: 90% of F&O traders lose money. Never touch it as beginner.
- ❌ Following tips — WhatsApp, Telegram, YouTube "multibaggers" are traps
- ❌ Panic selling in crashes — every crash in history has recovered. Stay invested.
- ❌ Checking portfolio every hour — invest long-term and check monthly at most
- ❌ Investing money you need soon — only invest what you won't need for 5+ years
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How much money do I need to start?
You can start with ₹100. Most brokers allow buying even 1 share. Practically, start with ₹5,000-10,000 to build a meaningful position.
Q: Is the stock market safe?
In the short term — no, it's volatile. In the long term (10+ years) — yes, consistently wealth-creating. Never invest money you need within 3 years in stocks.
Q: Zerodha vs Groww — which is better?
Both are excellent. Zerodha: better for active investors, powerful charts. Groww: simpler interface, better for beginners and mutual funds.
Q: How much can I earn?
Nifty 50 historically gives ~14% CAGR. ₹10,000/month SIP for 20 years at 14% = ₹1.5 crore. Individual stock picking can give more — or less.
Disclaimer: Stock market investments are subject to market risks. Past performance doesn't guarantee future results. The Invest Mate is not SEBI registered. Consult a registered advisor before investing.

