How can a 15-year-old high school student find an in-person finance or investment banking internship for summer 2026?
Hi everyone,
I’m a 15-year-old student at Shiv Nadar School in Gurugram with a strong interest in finance, day trading, and the stock market. I’ve completed a simulated trading project where I earned $19 in two hours through calculated trades, and I’m currently learning about diversification and sector rotation.
I’m looking for a short, in-person (4–6 week) finance or investment banking internship for summer 2026, ideally in New York City or another major financial hub. I’ve already built my resume and portfolio, but most internships I find are for college students.
Can anyone please suggest:
Platforms or organizations that offer in-person internships for high school students in finance or business?
Smaller boutique firms or nonprofits that might accept a motivated high school intern?
Tips on how to reach out to firms directly for a short internship or shadowing opportunity?
Any advice or leads would mean a lot — I’m eager to learn hands-on skills and gain real-world exposure.
Thank you!
— Riaan
2 answers
Sean’s Answer
Godfred’s Answer
Great initiative reaching out! Here's a strategy that could give you a real edge while you're still in high school:
Start Building Your Network NOW Through Virtual Channels. Since in-person internships are tough to secure at 15, consider these high-impact alternatives:
LinkedIn Power Moves: Create a professional LinkedIn profile highlighting your trading project and learning journey. Start following and engaging with content from finance professionals, especially those who started young or work at firms you admire. Thoughtful comments on posts can get you noticed.
Virtual Insight Programs: Many major banks (Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan) offer virtual insight days or summer programs specifically for high school students. These are usually 1-3 days, free, and give you insider knowledge plus networking opportunities. Apply to ALL of them for summer 2026. Check out the Wharton Global Youth Program.
The Cold Email That Works: Since you're in Gurugram, reach out to boutique investment firms or wealth management offices in Delhi/Gurugram first. Your email should be concise: who you are, your specific trading project results, and ask for a 2-week unpaid internship or even just job shadowing for a few days. Many smaller firms are more flexible than big banks.
Create Content: Start a finance blog or LinkedIn newsletter documenting your learning journey, market observations, or analysis of Indian stocks. This demonstrates initiative and gives you something concrete to show when you do apply for internships next year.
Competitive Edge: Look into competitions like the Wharton Investment Competition or KWHS (Knowledge@Wharton High School) Investment Competition. Winning or even participating looks exceptional on applications.
The truth is, the relationships and knowledge you build now will matter more than a single internship. By the time you're applying to college analyst programs, you'll have a compelling story of sustained interest and self-driven learning.
Keep that momentum going!