This piece is part of my 2016–2026 archive migration. Some original formatting, content, and external links may be missing, changed, or not be optimized.
Use Fundrise as an entry point
You don’t “get into private equity” with $50 the way institutions or high net worth individuals do. Let’s start here.
What you can do with barely any money is get exposure to private-market style investments through pooled vehicles that lower the barrier to entry. That’s the game: access, not status. You’re not becoming a private equity partner. You’re buying a slice of a fund that buys the assets.
And that’s exactly why platforms like Fundrise matter: they’re built to let normal people touch asset classes that used to be gated behind “accredited investor” requirements, huge minimums, and insider networks.
First, what you’re actually trying to buy: private equity vs. private lending
Private equity (simplified)
You’re buying ownership (equity) in companies that aren’t publicly traded.
Returns come from growth, profits, or eventual exits (acquisition/IPO).
It’s usually long-term, often illiquid, and valuations are not as transparent as public markets.
Private lending / private credit (simplified):
You’re lending money (directly or indirectly) in exchange for yield.
Returns come from interest payments and structured deals (debt, mezzanine, preferred equity, etc.).
It can be more “income-like,” but it’s not risk-free. If borrowers struggle, you feel it.
Most people don’t have access to either of these in any meaningful way because:
minimums can be 25k, 100k, 250k, 1 million, etc.
you may need investor accreditation
you need relationships or access
you accept money lockups and complexity
Fundrise changes the access piece.
What Fundrise actually offers now (and why it matters): Fundrise started as a real estate-focused investment, but it has expanded beyond a simple “real estate app” into a broader private markets platform: real estate, venture/innovation (private tech), and private credit.
The Two Buckets with Fundrise
1. Private equity exposure via the Innovation Fund (venture-style investing)
Fundrise’s Innovation Fund is designed to invest in private, potentially high-growth technology companies (multi-stage).
And the minimum investment is as low as $10.
That’s the big deal: you’re getting venture/private-company exposure without needing $50k and an invite.
Reality check:
This is long-term money.
It won’t behave like the stock market day-to-day because valuations update differently.
You’re paying for access + management + structure, and liquidity is not the point.
2. Private lending exposure via private credit / income oriented funds
Fundrise has a private credit strategy and highlights funds like its Income-focused offerings (real-estate-backed fixed income strategies, preferred equity, real estate debt, etc.)
Fundrise also markets an Income Fund positioned around cash flow and a current distribution rate, with flexible minimums at $10 (depending on the offering).
Quick Notes
“Income” does not mean guaranteed.
Private credit can get punched when real estate markets seize up or borrowers hit stress.
If you need liquidity next month, you’re playing the wrong game.
Also important: Fundrise has offered certain accredited-only products with higher minimums. But you don’t need to jump into these for access.
How to start with barely any money (the smart way)
If you’re starting from almost nothing, you need to approach this like an operator, not a gambler.
Step 1: Separate “investing” from “survival”
Before you lock money into anything private-market-ish
have your basic bills handled
have an emergency fund buffer (ideally 12 months or more)
eliminate high interest debt you can’t out earn
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If you’re broke-broke, throwing your last $100 into private credit is not “investing,” that’s just unintelligent.
Step 2: Use Fundrise the way it was designed – low minimum, consistent contributions
Fundrise allows taxable accounts to start as low as $10, and IRAs have a higher minimum (commonly $1,000).
So if your starting point is small start with $10–$50, automate a weekly or monthly contribution, and increase these contributions over time (scale with your income).
Consistency matters more than “picking the perfect fund” when your capital base is tiny.
Step 3: Decide what you actually want: growth vs. income
If your goal is growth and you can sit tight:
Innovation/venture exposure might fit your intent (this is what I’m in today)
If your goal is income-like behavior and you understand the tradeoffs:
private credit / income funds may fit better (Fundrise has dividend REIT paying options as well.)
But don’t lie to yourself:
If you need the money soon, you don’t want illiquid funds
If volatility makes you panic, you don’t want private equity exposure either; this reminds me of people who jump out whenever trouble comes knocking – they don’t know how to weather investment swings.
Step 4: Keep your allocation realistic
A clean rule if you’re just starting is to build your core foundation first (broad index funds, emergency savings, stability) and treat private markets as a satellite position.
If you only have $1,000 total invested and you put 80% into illiquid alts because it sounds cool, you’re not sophisticated – you’re just unbalanced.
Step 5: Understand what “returns really look like here”
Private investments don’t always look exciting:
pricing updates can be slower
there can be periods that look “flat”
there can be drawdowns too, just less visibly chaotic than public markets
And because of how private assets are valued, the experience can feel smoother – until it isn’t. That’s not a knock; it’s just how the structure works.
The Risks People Ignore (and then act shocked about later)
Liquidity is limited – even when redemptions exist, you’re still not dealing with the instant liquidity of public ETFs.
Fees exist for a reason – structure costs money. You’re paying for sourcing, underwriting, management, servicing, compliance, platform operations. That doesn’t mean it’s bad. It means you need to stop pretending it’s free.
Private credit isn’t magic. Yes, yields can look attractive. But credit cycles are real, and real estate credit stress is real.
Venture is not a steady climb. Private company investing can be a long waiting game. And some “great stories” never become great returns.
TL;DR
You can’t buy your way into the private equity world with $20, but you can buy exposure to private-market investments with $20 – and compound that exposure over time through consistency.
And Fundrise is one of the mainstream ways people do that at low minimums.
Curious? Fundrise is offering $100 sign up bonuses for a limited time.
This content is for informational purposes only — not professional advice. Consult a qualified professional before making any major decisions.