"Invest like Warren Buffett" is a phrase that means everything and nothing. Buffett himself has spent six decades explaining his approach across shareholder letters, books, and interviews — but the published material is often more philosophical than practical. This post is the opposite: 12 concrete steps a retail investor can follow today, with specific thresholds and timeframes, to actually apply Buffett's framework.
Not "buy what you understand." Twelve actual steps you do in order.
Step 1 — Open a brokerage account that lets you hold individual stocks for years
The first practical step is the brokerage choice. Most "robo-advisor" apps make individual stock purchases either friction-heavy or impossible; you want a brokerage where buying one share of Coca-Cola in 2026 and holding it untouched until 2046 is a frictionless default.
Recommended brokerages:
- US investors: Interactive Brokers (lowest fees, best global access), Fidelity (no commissions, strong long-term-investor service), Charles Schwab
- EU/DE investors: Trade Republic (mobile-first, very low fees), Comdirect (full-service, slightly higher fees), Interactive Brokers EU
- UK investors: Interactive Brokers UK, AJ Bell, Hargreaves Lansdown (high cost but full service)
Avoid platforms with payment-for-order-flow (PFOF) routing in jurisdictions where it's legal — your execution prices may be worse than the displayed quote.
Step 2 — Set aside the cash you'll need for emergencies BEFORE you invest
Buffett has been clear: the worst time to be forced to sell stocks is during a crash, which is exactly when you need cash for an emergency. Before any stock investment, build an emergency fund of 3-6 months of expenses in a high-yield savings account, money market fund, or short-term Treasury bills.
This is not investment money. It is the psychological foundation that lets you NOT panic-sell in 2026's eventual drawdown.
Step 3 — Decide your time horizon
Buffett's published answer is "forever, or as long as the business stays wonderful." If you can commit to a 10+ year minimum holding period, you're in the right framework. If you'd sell at a 30 percent gain, you're not actually applying Buffett's approach — you're momentum trading with value language. Be honest with yourself before going further.
Step 4 — Start with a broad-market index as your default
Buffett himself has said multiple times that for the typical retail investor, "the best investment by far is a low-cost S&P 500 index fund." Before picking individual stocks, your default position should be a broad-market index fund:
- US: VOO (Vanguard S&P 500) or SPY
- Global: VWRL/VWCE (Vanguard FTSE All-World) or IWDA (iShares MSCI World)
Allocate 50-70 percent of your investing capital to this index position. The remaining 30-50 percent goes to individual stock picks if you have the time and discipline. If you don't, just 100 percent index and skip the rest of this post.
Step 5 — Learn to read a 10-K filing
Buffett's whole framework rests on understanding a business. The only way to understand a business is to read its primary source — the annual report (10-K in the US, Geschäftsbericht in Germany, Annual Report in the UK).
Focus on these sections in order:
- Item 1 (Business overview): what does the company actually sell?
- Item 1A (Risk factors): management's own listing of what could go wrong
- Item 7 (MD&A): management's discussion of the year's results
- Item 8 (Financial statements): the income statement, balance sheet, cash-flow statement
You don't need to understand every detail. You need to be able to answer: what does this company sell, how does it make money, what's the moat, and what's the worst-case scenario. The first 10-K takes 4-6 hours to read. The 10th takes 90 minutes.
Step 6 — Pick 3-5 candidate stocks to research
Don't try to evaluate 50 stocks. Pick 3-5 candidates from a curated framework-aware list. Sources:
- /fit/buffett/ — top 25 stocks by Buffett-Fit Score
- /consensus/ — stocks passing 5+ of 7 frameworks
- Berkshire Hathaway's 13F filings (Buffett's actual portfolio, public quarterly)
- The "Magic Formula" list (Greenblatt's free tool at magicformulainvesting.com)
For each candidate, do a 1-hour first-pass read: the company's last 10-K, the most recent quarterly results, and the per-stock analysis on invest-like.com if it's covered.
Step 7 — Apply the 27-question checklist
The Munger discipline: a written checklist beats unaided judgement. The full checklist is at /blog/value-investing-checklist-printable-2026/. Twenty-seven questions across business quality, balance sheet, management, valuation, and personal fit. Answer them in writing for each candidate.
A candidate that fails 3 or more questions: move on. A candidate that passes most questions but fails on one specific point: that point is your bear case — be honest about whether you can live with it.
Step 8 — Estimate intrinsic value with conservative assumptions
The Buffett valuation is a discounted cash flow (DCF) on owner earnings (free cash flow with a maintenance-capex adjustment). For each candidate that passed Step 7:
- Project owner earnings for the next 10 years at a conservative growth rate (3-7 percent per year, never higher than the long-term GDP growth rate of the relevant economy plus a small premium)
- Apply a terminal growth rate of 2.5 percent (roughly long-term inflation)
- Discount back at the 10-year Treasury yield plus 3-4 percent equity risk premium (around 7-8 percent total in 2026)
This gives you an intrinsic value range. Don't fixate on the exact number; focus on the range — if your conservative-case DCF says fair value is $80-100 and the current price is $60, there's clear margin of safety. If the range is $90-110 and current price is $105, walk away.
Tools to do this: invest-like.com's /buffett/[ticker]/ page surfaces the DCF for every stock, or you can build your own in Excel/Google Sheets from the 10-K cash flow statement.
Step 9 — Wait for a margin of safety of at least 30 percent
Buffett's rule: don't buy at fair value. Buy at a 30+ percent discount to your conservative DCF estimate. The margin of safety is your protection against being wrong about the growth rate, the moat durability, or the macro environment.
In practice, this means waiting. Sometimes 6 months. Sometimes 2 years. Sometimes never, for some stocks. Buffett famously waited for IBM in 1979 (didn't buy), then 2011 (bought), then 2017 (sold). Patience is structural to the framework.
If a stock passes Steps 1-8 but the current price is too high, put it on a watchlist with your DCF estimate as the trigger price. Check quarterly.
Step 10 — Size positions deliberately
When you do buy, size matters. Buffett-style portfolios are concentrated: 5-15 positions typically, with the highest-conviction names sized at 5-15 percent of the portfolio each. The Kelly criterion math suggests slightly larger sizing for higher-conviction positions, but most retail investors size too aggressively when excited and too conservatively when fearful. A simple rule: equal-weight your top 10-15 positions, with the index fund acting as the diversification base.
Do not concentrate more than 10 percent in a single stock until you've held it for 12+ months without a thesis-breaking event.
Step 11 — Build the position over time, not in one trade
If you've decided to allocate 5 percent of your portfolio to Stock X, don't buy the full 5 percent in one Monday morning order. Buffett historically built positions over weeks or months as he waited for opportunistic prices.
Practical approach: split into 3 tranches over 60 days. Buy 1/3 immediately, 1/3 if the stock dips 5 percent, 1/3 if it dips another 5 percent. If the stock never dips, you've committed to 1/3 at your initial entry price, which is fine.
Step 12 — Hold and recheck quarterly
After buying, the actual work is to NOT trade. Re-read the quarterly earnings reports. Update your DCF every quarter with the new numbers. Track whether your original thesis is intact.
Sell criteria:
- Thesis broken: the moat erodes, the management quality drops, the durability story changes
- Better opportunity at deeper margin of safety: a candidate stock you've been watching reaches a 50+ percent margin of safety while your existing position has shrunk to 10 percent margin
- Permanent fundamental impairment: regulatory change, technology disruption, key-customer loss that the framework can't recover from
DO NOT sell because:
- The stock dropped 20 percent (drawdowns are normal)
- The stock rose 50 percent (selling winners is the structural mistake of value investors)
- You read a negative analyst piece (analyst coverage is noise relative to your 10-year time horizon)
- You're bored (boredom is the price of compounding)
Common questions
How much money do I need to start? Mathematically, $500. Practically, $5,000 to make brokerage friction acceptable. The compounding math works at any size; the size just affects how long until the dollar amounts feel meaningful.
Can I do this if I have a full-time job? Yes. The active research takes 4-8 hours per stock initially, then 1-2 hours per quarter to re-check. A 10-stock portfolio is 10-20 hours per quarter to maintain. Most working professionals can do that in evenings and weekends.
What if I make a mistake? You will. Every value investor including Buffett has documented mistakes — Buffett's letters list errors openly. The framework is robust to mistakes: a position size of 5-10 percent means a -50 percent permanent loss on one name costs you 2.5-5 percent of the portfolio. Survivable. Concentrated 25 percent positions in unproven theses are not.
Should I follow Berkshire's 13F? Worth tracking as a data point, not as a buy signal. Berkshire's 13F is published 45 days after quarter-end, so by the time you see it, the price has already moved. Track it for ideas, validate independently.
Tools that help
Further reading
Educational only. Not investment advice. Consult a licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions.