Find the Right Way to
Short Anything
Ask about any market, stock, or sector. We'll match you with short ETFs, inverse ETFs, and calculators for the trade.
Ask about any market, stock, or sector. We'll match you with short ETFs, inverse ETFs, and calculators for the trade.
Shorting a stock means profiting when its price falls. The simplest way to short in 2026 is through inverse ETFs — exchange-traded funds that rise when a stock, index, or sector declines. You buy them on any brokerage like a regular stock, with no margin account or borrowing required.
There are three main methods: inverse ETFs (easiest), traditional short selling (requires a margin account), and put options (requires options approval). For most investors, inverse ETFs are the fastest and lowest-friction path.
Complete guide: How to short a stock →The most widely traded inverse ETFs cover major indices and individual stocks. SQQQ provides 3x inverse exposure to the NASDAQ-100 — when the NASDAQ falls 1%, SQQQ aims to rise 3%. SPXU does the same for the S&P 500. For single stocks, TSLS shorts Tesla and BITI shorts Bitcoin futures.
Browse all 50+ inverse ETFs →For broad U.S. market shorts, start with index short ETFs. For specific queries, use SDS for 2x short S&P 500, DOG for 1x short Dow Jones, FAZ for 3x short financials, and SVXY/SVIX for short VIX futures exposure.
Open the short ETF calculator →Leveraged inverse ETFs (2x, 3x) reset their exposure daily. This daily rebalancing causes value erosion over time — even if the underlying index moves in your favor. A 3x inverse ETF held for weeks in a volatile, sideways market can lose significant value despite no net move in the index. These products are designed for short-term trading, not long-term holds.
Understanding leverage decay →