Cryptocurrency investing for beginners 2026 — what to actually buy and what to avoid
Crypto markets cycle. We're in another one. Here's the framework I'd give a friend asking how to start.
The 5% rule
Don't put more than 5% of your investable money into crypto. Treat it like a high-risk asset class, because that's exactly what it is. If 5% of your portfolio going to zero overnight would change your retirement plan, your number is too high.
What to actually buy
For your first $500: 70% Bitcoin, 30% Ethereum. That's it. Skip altcoins until you understand what you're doing. Most altcoins (including XRP, despite the trending hype) underperform Bitcoin over multi-year periods. The hot coin of any given cycle is rarely the hot coin of the next one.
Where to buy
For a US or Canadian beginner: Coinbase is the easiest. Higher fees than alternatives but you won't lose your account or your coins. Once you're comfortable, Kraken has lower fees and a cleaner trading interface.
The custody question
Once you have more than $500 in crypto, get a hardware wallet. The Ledger Nano X is around $150 and the standard pick. "Not your keys, not your coins" is real. Centralised exchange failures (FTX, Celsius) wiped out millions of normal investors. A hardware wallet is the difference between owning crypto and renting it from someone else's spreadsheet.
If you want a metal backup for the seed phrase, a Cryptosteel Capsule (~$80) survives fire and flood. Paper does not.
What to read
Skip the hype books. The Bitcoin Standard for the philosophical case (whether you agree or not, it sharpens your thinking). The Infinite Machine for Ethereum's origin story. That's the reading list. Twenty other crypto books on Amazon are noise.
The tax thing nobody mentions
Every crypto trade is a taxable event in the US and Canada. Koinly or CoinTracker for tax reporting — $50-200/year depending on transaction count. If you skip this you'll find out the hard way when the exchange sends a 1099 to the IRS and you've forgotten which DEX you swapped on in March.
What to avoid
Memecoins. NFTs. Anything with a Discord-only community. Yield farming. Leverage. Borrowing against crypto. Whatever a YouTuber tells you. The shortcut to losing money in crypto is taking shortcuts.
Honest take
Bitcoin and Ethereum on Coinbase, then a Ledger hardware wallet. That's the entire kit for 95% of people. Total: $200 setup plus your investment. Anyone selling you something more complicated wants your money more than they want you to make money.






