How to Build an Investment Portfolio from Scratch in 2026

From your first emergency fund to a fully diversified ETF portfolio — the complete, step-by-step action plan with real allocations by age and risk profile.

STEP 1 STEP 2 STEP 3 STEP 4 🏦 Emergency Fund 3–6 months expenses · Livret A / ISA Cash · Always liquid 🛡️ Debt Clearance & Insurance Repay high-interest debt · Term life · Income protection 📋 Tax-Advantaged Accounts PEA · Assurance-Vie · PER · ISA · SIPP (UK) 📈 Growth Investments ETFs · Stocks · SCPI · Crypto Priority order →
The four-tier wealth pyramid — always build from the base up. Growth investments only make sense once the lower tiers are solid.

Most people start investing backwards. They dive straight into stocks, crypto or funds without having an emergency cushion, without clearing expensive debt, and without understanding which account to use. The result: they panic-sell at the first market dip and lose money that should have stayed in a savings account.

Building a portfolio correctly means following a clear order of operations. This guide gives you that order — from the first €100 in a savings account to a fully structured multi-asset portfolio — with concrete numbers, account recommendations for both France and the UK, and real allocation examples based on age and risk tolerance.

🎯 What You'll Have by the End of This Guide

A clear 6-step action plan, a recommended broker and account for your situation, a concrete asset allocation matched to your age and risk profile, and the discipline framework to stick to it long-term.

👤 Case Study: James, 32 — Moving from London to Paris

James is a software engineer who moved from London to Paris in 2024. He has £8,000 saved (no debt), contributes to his UK workplace pension, and wants to start investing in France. We'll follow his journey through each step of this guide to show how the principles apply in practice — whether you're building a UK ISA/SIPP portfolio or a French PEA/Assurance-Vie portfolio.

Before You Invest: The Four Prerequisites

Before putting a single euro into the stock market, four conditions should be met. Skipping any of them turns investing into gambling.

#PrerequisiteWhy it mattersTarget
1Emergency fundPrevents forced selling during market crashes3–6 months net income
2No high-interest debtA 15% credit card rate beats any investment returnAll debt above 5% cleared
3Basic insuranceHealth crisis or disability can wipe savings overnightHealth, income protection, life (if dependants)
4Stable incomeIrregular income means unpredictable investment capacityAt least 6 months of stable income history

James's status: Emergency fund ✓ (£8,000 ≈ 5 months), no consumer debt ✓, health covered by French mutuelle ✓, stable employment ✓. He's ready to invest.

Step 1 — Build Your Emergency Fund

Your emergency fund is not an investment — it's a firewall. It stops you from being forced to sell investments at the worst possible moment (during a market crash, when you've just lost your job).

Where to Keep It

AccountCountry2026 RateLimitTax
Livret A🇫🇷 France3.0%€22,9500% (tax-free)
LEP🇫🇷 France (low income)3.5%€10,0000% (tax-free)
LDDS🇫🇷 France3.0%€12,0000% (tax-free)
Cash ISA🇬🇧 UK4.5–5.0%£20,000/yr0% (tax-free)
Easy-Access Savings🇬🇧 UK4.2–4.8%NonePersonal savings allowance
💡 James's Move

James keeps £5,000 in a UK Cash ISA (earning ~4.8%) as his UK emergency reserve. He opens a French Livret A with €3,000 as his local French cushion. Total emergency fund: ~6 months. He's now ready to invest the remainder systematically.

Step 2 — Choose the Right Investment Accounts

The account you use determines how your gains are taxed. This single decision can add — or cost — tens of thousands of euros over a 20-year horizon. Always max out tax-advantaged accounts before using a standard brokerage.

French Residents

AccountBest forTax after maturityCeilingPriority
PEAStocks & ETFs (EU/global swap)17.2% (5+ yrs)€150,000⭐ First
Assurance-VieBonds, SCPIs, balanced funds24.7% (8+ yrs)None⭐ Second
PERRetirement (long lock-in)Taxed at retirement income rate~€35K/yr⭐ Third (TMI 30%+)
CTOUS stocks, alternatives, overflow30% flat taxNoneAfter PEA full

UK Residents

AccountBest forTax treatmentCeilingPriority
Stocks & Shares ISAStocks, ETFs, funds0% on gains & dividends£20,000/yr⭐ First
SIPP / Workplace PensionRetirement savingsTax relief on contributions£60,000/yr⭐ Match employer first
Lifetime ISA (LISA)First home or retirement (under 40)25% bonus + tax-free growth£4,000/yrUse if eligible
GIA (General Investment Account)Overflow above ISA limitCGT after £3,000 annual exemptNoneAfter ISA full

James's move: He opens a PEA in France immediately (starting the 5-year tax clock with €500). He already has a UK workplace pension. He'll also open an Assurance-Vie for bonds/SCPI allocation once his PEA is running.

Step 3 — Define Your Risk Profile

Your risk profile determines how much volatility you can tolerate — psychologically and financially. Getting this wrong is the #1 reason investors panic-sell at market bottoms.

Answer these four questions honestly:

  1. Time horizon: When will you need this money? (Under 5 yrs = conservative; 10–20 yrs = can be aggressive)
  2. Income stability: Could you survive 6 months without a salary? (Yes = higher risk tolerance)
  3. Loss reaction: If your €10,000 portfolio dropped to €6,000 tomorrow, would you: sell everything / hold / buy more? (Sell = conservative; buy more = aggressive)
  4. Dependants: Do you have children or parents who depend on you financially? (Yes = slightly more conservative)
ProfileTime horizonMax tolerable lossExpected return (10 yr avg)
Conservative2–5 years~10%3–5%/yr
Balanced5–10 years~25%5–7%/yr
Growth10–20 years~40%7–9%/yr
Aggressive20+ years~50%+8–10%/yr

James's profile: 32 years old, stable income, no dependants, 20+ year horizon, would buy more in a dip → Growth to Aggressive. His allocation will be heavily equity-weighted.

Step 4 — Set Your Asset Allocation

Asset allocation — how you split money between stocks, bonds, real estate and cash — determines 90% of your long-term returns. Pick the right mix for your profile and hold it consistently through market cycles.

Sample Asset Allocations by Investor Profile CONSER- VATIVE 30% Stocks 55% Bonds 15% Cash / Money Mkt BALANCED 60% Stocks 30% Bonds 10% Real Estate / Alternatives GROWTH 85% Stocks 10% Alternatives 5% Cash buffer
Sample allocations — adjust to your own time horizon and risk tolerance. These are starting points, not rigid rules.

The Age Rule: 110 Minus Your Age

A simple rule used by many advisers: subtract your age from 110 to get your maximum equity percentage. The rest goes to bonds, money market or cash. Examples:

  • Age 25 → 85% stocks, 15% bonds
  • Age 35 → 75% stocks, 25% bonds
  • Age 45 → 65% stocks, 35% bonds
  • Age 60 → 50% stocks, 50% bonds (capital preservation phase)

This is a starting point, not a rule. A 45-year-old with high risk tolerance and a 25-year horizon could comfortably hold 80% stocks. A 30-year-old with low risk tolerance or a 5-year goal should hold less.

Step 5 — Choose Your Investments

Once you know your allocation, pick the simplest possible instruments to fill each bucket. Research consistently shows that low-cost passive ETFs outperform 80–90% of actively managed funds over 15-year periods.

The Core Equity Allocation (Stocks Bucket)

ETF / FundWhat it holdsPEA eligibleTERBroker
Amundi MSCI World UCITS ETF (CW8)1,500+ global companies✓ Swap0.38%Most FR brokers
iShares Core MSCI World (IWDA)1,500+ global companiesCTO / ISA only0.20%UK/CTO brokers
Vanguard FTSE All-World (VWRL)3,600+ stocks worldwideCTO / ISA only0.22%UK/CTO brokers
BNP Easy S&P 500500 US large caps✓ Swap0.15%Most FR brokers
Lyxor MSCI Emerging Markets~1,400 EM companies✓ Swap0.55%Most FR brokers

The Bond Allocation

InstrumentExpected return 2026RiskBest held in
Fonds euro (AV)2.5–3.5%Very lowAssurance-Vie
Short-term bond ETF3.0–4.0%LowCTO / ISA
UK Gilts / OAT (FR bonds)3.5–4.2%LowCTO / SIPP / ISA
Global aggregate bond ETF3.5–4.5%Low-MedCTO / ISA

The Simplest Possible Portfolio (James's Choice)

James goes with a 3-fund portfolio — the classic approach recommended by John Bogle (founder of Vanguard) and widely used in the UK and France:

  1. Amundi MSCI World (CW8) in his PEA — 75% of portfolio
  2. Lyxor EM ETF in his PEA — 10% of portfolio
  3. Fonds euro in his Assurance-Vie — 15% of portfolio

Total: 3 products, 2 accounts, full global diversification. That's it.

📌 UK Note: The Vanguard LifeStrategy Range

UK investors inside an ISA or SIPP can use Vanguard LifeStrategy funds (20%, 40%, 60%, 80% or 100% equity) — a single fund that automatically maintains its allocation and rebalances. LifeStrategy 80% Equity is the most popular choice for a 30–40 year old growth investor. Available from Vanguard UK, Hargreaves Lansdown, AJ Bell, and most UK platforms.

Step 6 — Automate, Rebalance and Stay the Course

The biggest risk to your portfolio is not the market — it's your own behaviour. Investors who trade frequently, try to time the market, or panic-sell during corrections consistently underperform those who invest automatically and hold.

Set Up Automatic Monthly Contributions

Most French and UK brokers allow you to set up recurring investments (investissement programmé). Automate a fixed amount each month — even €50–€100 — so you invest regardless of market conditions. This is called Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA) and it removes emotion from the equation.

Monthly amount10 years (7% avg)20 years (7% avg)30 years (7% avg)
€100/month€17,409€52,397€121,997
€200/month€34,818€104,794€243,994
€500/month€87,046€261,986€609,985
€1,000/month€174,092€523,973€1,219,971

Annual Rebalancing

Once a year, check if your allocation has drifted from target. If stocks surged and are now 90% of your portfolio instead of 75%, sell a little and buy bonds to restore balance. This is automatic discipline — you sell high and buy low without trying to time anything.

⚡ Rebalancing in a PEA: No Tax Event

Selling and rebalancing inside a PEA triggers no tax — gains are sheltered. In a CTO, selling to rebalance creates a taxable event. This is another reason to do your active rebalancing inside your PEA and keep the CTO as a long-hold satellite.

Sample Portfolios by Age and Profile

Portfolio Growth — €200/month invested at 7% annual return €0 €50K €100K €150K €200K Yr 0 Yr 5 Yr 10 Yr 15 Yr 20 Yr 25 Yr 30 €244K Portfolio value Portfolio (7%/yr) Contributions only (€72K)
Compound growth of €200/month over 30 years at 7% average annual return. Total invested: €72,000. Final value: ~€244,000. The gap between the two lines is compound interest working for you.

Portfolio A — Conservative (Age 55+, or short horizon)

Asset classAllocationInstrument (France)Instrument (UK)
Global equities30%Amundi MSCI World (CW8) — PEAVanguard LifeStrategy 20% / FTSE All-World — ISA
Bonds / Fonds euro50%Fonds euro — Assurance-VieVanguard UK Gilt ETF, short-term bond ETF — ISA
Money market / Cash20%Livret A, LDDSCash ISA, Premium Bonds

Portfolio B — Balanced (Age 40–55, medium risk)

Asset classAllocationInstrument (France)Instrument (UK)
Global equities55%Amundi MSCI World — PEAiShares MSCI World (IWDA) — ISA
Emerging markets10%Lyxor EM ETF — PEAVanguard FTSE EM — ISA
Bonds / Fonds euro25%Fonds euro — AVVanguard LifeStrategy 40% — ISA
Real estate (SCPI)10%SCPI units — AVREIT ETF (e.g. iShares DPYA) — ISA

Portfolio C — Growth / Aggressive (Under 40, long horizon)

Asset classAllocationInstrument (France)Instrument (UK)
Global equities (core)70%Amundi MSCI World (CW8) — PEAVanguard FTSE All-World (VWRL) — ISA
Emerging markets15%Lyxor EM ETF — PEAiShares MSCI EM (EIMI) — ISA
Alternatives / Small caps10%Amundi Small Cap ETF — CTOiShares MSCI World Small Cap — ISA
Cash buffer5%Livret ACash ISA / Premium Bonds

James's final portfolio: He goes with Portfolio C — 70% Amundi MSCI World (CW8) in his PEA, 15% Lyxor Emerging Markets in his PEA, 15% fonds euro in a no-fee Assurance-Vie (Linxea Spirit 2). Automatic monthly DCA of €400/month split across the three. Annual review each January.

The 7 Most Common Beginner Mistakes

  1. Investing before building an emergency fund — forces selling at the worst time
  2. Using a CTO when a PEA is available — costs 12.8% more tax on every gain
  3. Picking individual stocks before mastering ETFs — most stock pickers underperform the MSCI World over 10+ years
  4. Checking your portfolio every day — increases anxiety, triggers emotional decisions
  5. Waiting for "the right moment" to invest — time in the market beats timing the market, always
  6. Not rebalancing — after a bull run your risk profile may be much higher than intended
  7. Ignoring fees — a 1% annual fee difference costs €50,000+ over 30 years on a €200/month plan

Our Verdict: Keep It Simple and Start Today

The investors who build the most wealth are rarely the ones who pick the best stocks. They're the ones who started early, kept costs low, diversified broadly, and never panicked during downturns. A 3-fund portfolio in a tax-advantaged account, invested automatically each month, beats almost every complex strategy over 20+ years.

  • French residents: Open a PEA today (even with €100), add an Assurance-Vie for bonds/SCPI, consider a PER if you're in the 30%+ tax bracket
  • UK residents: Maximise your Stocks & Shares ISA (£20K/yr), always match employer pension contributions first (free money), add a LISA if you're under 40
  • Expats (UK → France like James): Keep UK pension running, open a French PEA for new equity investments, seek specialist cross-border tax advice before repatriating UK pension funds
  • Everyone: Automate monthly contributions, rebalance annually, reduce fees, ignore the noise
📌 One-Page Summary for James (and You)

1. Emergency fund: ✓ (Livret A + Cash ISA) → 2. PEA open with €100 → 3. Assurance-Vie open → 4. Monthly DCA: €400/month (70% MSCI World, 15% EM, 15% fonds euro) → 5. Review annually → 6. Don't touch it for 20 years.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much money do I need to start building an investment portfolio?

You can start with as little as €10–€100 using fractional ETFs on brokers like Trade Republic or Degiro. A monthly investment of €100 from age 25 can grow to €150,000+ by retirement at 65, assuming 7% annual returns. Start small, start now — the time advantage compounds enormously.

What is the right asset allocation for a beginner?

A simple starting allocation for a long-term investor under 40 is 80–90% global equities (MSCI World ETF) and 10–20% bonds or money market. Use the "110 minus your age" rule as a starting point, then adjust based on your personal risk tolerance and time horizon.

Should I invest in France or the UK system?

If you are a French tax resident, use French wrappers: PEA (tax-free gains after 5 years), Assurance-Vie (tax-efficient after 8 years), and PER (pension, tax-deductible). If you are a UK resident, the ISA (£20K/yr, tax-free) and SIPP (pension, 25% tax-free lump sum at retirement) are the closest equivalents. Expats should seek specialist cross-border tax advice.

TM
Thomas Mercier
Personal Finance Expert & Founder

Thomas is an independent financial analyst with 10+ years of experience in wealth management, taxation and investment strategy. He founded Smart Wealth Blog to make personal finance accessible to everyone — no jargon, no conflict of interest.

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