StudyThe Boarding PassLesson 10
Lesson 10 of 21Week 210 min read

Your First Purchase

Step-by-step: buying your first sats.

Enough theory. Let's buy some bitcoin.

This lesson walks through the actual process. We'll use a generic flow that applies to most exchanges, though specific steps vary.

Before You Start

You'll need:

Step 1: Create Your Account

Go to your chosen exchange and sign up. You'll provide:

Enable two-factor authentication (2FA) immediately. Use an authenticator app (like Authy or Google Authenticator), not SMS. SMS can be intercepted.

Step 2: Verify Your Identity

This is the KYC part. Most exchanges require:

Verification can take minutes or days depending on the exchange and their backlog. Some offer tiered verification—basic for small amounts, full for larger.

Step 3: Add a Funding Method

Link a bank account or card. Options typically include:

For regular purchases, set up ACH. For a one-time immediate purchase, debit card works despite the fee.

Step 4: Deposit Funds

Transfer money to the exchange. If using ACH:

Step 5: Place Your Order

Navigate to the buy section. You'll see:

For your first purchase, market order is fine. You're learning the process, not optimizing for a few dollars.

Enter the amount you want to buy. You can enter in dollars ($100) or bitcoin (0.002 BTC). The exchange shows the conversion.

Review the order:

Click buy.

Step 6: Verify the Purchase

Check your balance. You should see bitcoin (or the fraction thereof) in your exchange account.

Congratulations—you own bitcoin.

But you're not done.

Step 7: Withdraw to Your Own Wallet

This is the most important step that most beginners skip.

Leaving bitcoin on the exchange means trusting the exchange. Exchanges get hacked. Exchanges go bankrupt. Exchanges freeze accounts.

In the next lessons, we'll cover setting up your own wallet. For now, know that the process is:

  1. Get your wallet's receiving address
  2. Go to the exchange withdrawal section
  3. Paste the address
  4. Enter the amount
  5. Confirm the withdrawal
  6. Wait for network confirmation

The bitcoin is truly yours only when it's in a wallet you control.

How Much Should You Buy?

There's no right answer. Consider:

Many people start with $50-$100 as a learning experience. Others dive in deeper. Bitcoin doesn't care—you can buy $10 or $10 million.

Don't Stare at the Price

Once you've bought, resist the urge to check the price constantly. Bitcoin is volatile. It will go down sometimes. It will go up sometimes. If you're in it for the long term, daily price movements are noise.

The best bitcoiners buy regularly, secure their coins, and then largely ignore the price.

Lesson Summary

  • Sign up, verify identity, enable 2FA
  • Link a funding method (bank account is cheapest)
  • Start with a market order for simplicity
  • Buy an amount you're comfortable with
  • Withdraw to your own wallet (covered in next lessons)
  • Don't obsess over price after buying