trading books vs paid courses - where should a complete beginner start
-
trying to figure out the right learning path. there are free resources everywhere, classic trading books that cost $20, and paid courses ranging from $200 to $3000. can't tell if the expensive courses are actually better or if you can learn everything from books and youtube for almost nothing.
how did experienced traders here actually learn? what was worth paying for and what was a waste?
-
books first, always. the classics - trading in the zone, reminiscences of a stock operator, technical analysis of financial markets - cost $50 total and contain more genuine insight than most $2000 courses. courses have a place later when you have enough base knowledge to evaluate what the course is actually teaching. a beginner who buys a course before reading the classics is paying for a structured presentation of information they don't yet know how to evaluate.
-
the signal that a course is worth the money: it teaches a specific, concrete methodology with entry criteria, exit criteria, and risk management rules you can test. if it's mainly mindset, vague concepts, and testimonials, it's not worth it regardless of price. the specific methodology matters more than the price tag.
-
spent $1800 on a course at 6 months in. the course itself was average but the community around it was genuinely valuable - experienced traders who answered questions, reviewed charts, and called out mistakes in real time. that community component was worth the cost. the course content i could have gotten from youtube. when evaluating courses look at what the community and support access is like, not just the curriculum.
-
start: trading in the zone (mark douglas) for psychology - this is the one book almost every profitable trader has read. then: the disciplined trader (also douglas) for the follow-up. for technical foundation: technical analysis of the financial markets (murphy). for position sizing and risk: van tharp's work on expectancy. this set covers the psychological and technical foundations that underlie almost every forex approach.
-
reading books doesn't make you a trader, trading makes you a trader. the amount of time beginners spend consuming content instead of actually executing trades is their biggest problem. open a micro account, lose some small amount of money, and learn from that. nothing in a book will prepare you for how you actually feel when real money is on the line.
-
the troll has a point but the sequence matters. completely undirected live trading without any framework produces random experiences you can't learn from systematically. the books provide the framework for interpreting the experiences you have on a live account. both together, not either alone.
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better 💗
Register Login