A good brokerage account in 2026 charges you nothing to buy stocks, nothing to buy major ETFs, and gives you all the research and tax tools you need to invest sanely for decades. A bad one buries you in tiny fees, gamifies trading, and pushes you toward whatever earns them the most revenue. Picking the right one is a 30-minute decision you only have to make once.
This guide walks through the four questions that decide which brokerage you should open in 2026 — followed by a head-to-head of the only three serious choices for most beginners.
The four questions that decide it
Before comparing brokerages, answer these:
- What are you trying to do — buy index funds, individual stocks, or trade options?
- Do you want banking + investing in one place, or do you already have a separate bank?
- How much hand-holding do you want — and how much will you pay for it?
- Will you need real customer service from a human, or are you comfortable with chat-only support?
Your answers map cleanly to one of three brokerages. The rest of this guide explains why.
How we evaluate a brokerage in 2026
Five things matter:
- Commissions — should be $0 on stocks and ETFs. Anything else is unacceptable in 2026.
- Underlying fund expenses — the expense ratios on the funds you'll actually buy.
- Cash management — APY on uninvested cash, and how easy ACH/wire transfers are.
- Research and tools — quality of stock screeners, ETF research, retirement projections.
- Tax features — automated tax-loss harvesting, easy 1099 export, cost-basis tracking.
A "free" brokerage that puts your uninvested cash in a 0.01% sweep is quietly costing you 4%+ APY. That's the kind of detail this guide flags.
1. Fidelity — best for first-time investors
Fidelity is the answer for most beginners. Here's why:
- $0 commission on stocks and ETFs.
- Four zero-expense-ratio index funds (FZROX, FZILX, FZIPX, FNILX) — the only major broker offering 0.00% expense ratio funds.
- Cash sweep automatically lands uninvested cash in SPAXX (around 4.0% APY in April 2026), not a 0.01% account.
- The Fidelity Cash Management Account works as a real checking account with debit card and ATM rebates — letting you hold a high-APY balance and pay bills from it.
The downside: Fidelity's app is fine, not exciting. If you want a slick mobile-first experience, Schwab and Vanguard both feel similarly utilitarian.
2. Vanguard — best for set-it-and-forget-it index investing
Vanguard is owned by its fund shareholders — meaning you, when you buy VTI or VOO. That structural alignment is the reason expense ratios on Vanguard's flagship index funds are still among the lowest in the industry, and the reason Vanguard tends not to push customers into high-margin products.
Pick Vanguard if:
- You're going to buy a couple of broad index funds (e.g., VTI + VXUS + BND) and contribute monthly for 30 years.
- You don't need a banking layer — you have a checking account elsewhere.
- You don't trade individual stocks or options.
Avoid Vanguard if you want a great trading experience or modern app polish — those are not Vanguard's priorities, and that's part of the value proposition.
3. Schwab — best for active investors and bond buyers
Schwab is the broker most pros use because of three things:
- thinkorswim, the trading platform Schwab acquired from TD Ameritrade, remains the best charting and options-analysis platform among the major brokers.
- Schwab's bond desk is the easiest way to actually buy individual Treasuries and corporate bonds — something Robinhood and Webull simply can't do well.
- Branch network is the deepest of any major broker, useful for complex IRA rollovers and account-transfer help.
Schwab's downside in 2026: the cash sweep is still poor. Schwab automatically sweeps uninvested cash into a 0.45% account unless you opt into a money-market fund manually. That's a real cost — fix it on day one if you go Schwab.
Comparison: Fidelity vs Vanguard vs Schwab in April 2026
| Feature |
Fidelity |
Vanguard |
Schwab |
| Stock & ETF commission |
$0 |
$0 |
$0 |
| Index fund minimum |
$0 |
$1–3,000 |
$0 |
| Cash sweep APY |
~4.0% (SPAXX) |
~4.5% (VMFXX) |
0.45% default |
| Banking integration |
Yes (CMA) |
No |
Yes (Schwab Bank) |
| Options trading |
Good |
Limited |
Excellent (thinkorswim) |
| Customer service |
24/7 phone |
Business hours |
24/7 phone + branches |
What about Robinhood, Webull, M1, SoFi Invest?
Honest answer: most beginners shouldn't start there in 2026.
- Robinhood has gotten better — they now offer IRAs with a contribution match, which is genuinely interesting. Still, their UX nudges short-term trading, and the cash sweep is mediocre unless you pay for Gold.
- Webull is fine for active stock traders but doesn't have the long-term retirement tooling Fidelity/Vanguard/Schwab have.
- M1 Finance has a great pie-investing UX but charges $36/year for the basic plan now, eroding the cost advantage at small balances.
- SoFi Invest is convenient if you're already a SoFi banking customer; otherwise it lacks the depth of the big three.
None of these are scams — they're just not the right first brokerage for someone learning long-term investing.
Common mistakes to avoid
Opening a brokerage before deciding on an account type. Most beginners need a Roth IRA first (tax-advantaged), then a taxable brokerage second. Don't skip the Roth.
Letting cash sit in a 0% sweep. Even the right broker will quietly cost you yield if you don't enable a money-market sweep on day one.
Trying to beat the market in your first year. The biggest single thing that determines your 30-year return is your savings rate, not your stock-picking skill. Index, automate contributions, and read more later.
FAQ
Is my money safe at a major brokerage?
SIPC insures brokerage accounts up to $500,000 ($250,000 cash). All three brokers above carry SIPC coverage and additional excess insurance.
Can I have accounts at multiple brokerages?
Yes — many readers run a Roth IRA at Fidelity and a taxable account at Vanguard or Schwab. There's no penalty.
How long does opening an account take?
About 10 minutes online. Funding it takes 1–3 business days for the first ACH transfer.
Where to go next
Once your brokerage is open, the next decisions are what to buy. Start with our beginner-friendly how to invest your first $1,000 guide, then read what 1% fees cost over 30 years before picking any actively managed fund.