Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA) Calculator
Simulate investing a fixed amount at regular intervals over time. Calculate your average cost per unit, total invested, and final portfolio value with DCA.
Results
Enter values and click Calculate to see results
How to Use This Dollar-Cost Averaging Calculator
Enter your investment amount and frequency
Input the fixed amount you plan to invest each period. Choose weekly, monthly, quarterly, or annually based on your investment schedule.
Set the investment duration and price range
Enter how many years you will invest. Provide the starting price and expected ending price per unit of your investment.
Click Calculate to see your DCA results
You will see total invested, units accumulated, average cost per unit, final portfolio value, and your gain or loss percentage.
DCA vs Lump Sum Comparison
| Scenario | Strategy | Avg Cost/Unit | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rising Market | Lump Sum | $10.00 | Higher |
| Rising Market | DCA | $12.50 | Lower |
| Falling Market | Lump Sum | $10.00 | Higher |
| Falling Market | DCA | $7.50 | Lower |
| Volatile Market | Lump Sum | Varies | Higher |
| Volatile Market | DCA | $9.25 | Lower |
Note: This example assumes a $10 starting price with various market conditions. DCA smooths out the average cost over time.
Understanding Dollar-Cost Averaging
What Is Dollar-Cost Averaging?
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) is an investment strategy where you invest a fixed amount of money at regular intervals, regardless of the asset price. When prices are high, your fixed amount buys fewer shares. When prices are low, it buys more shares. Over time, this can lower your average cost per share compared to trying to time the market.
How DCA Reduces Risk
The main benefit of DCA is that it removes the need to time the market. Instead of investing a lump sum all at once and risking buying at a peak, you spread your investments over time. This reduces the impact of volatility and protects against the regret of investing everything right before a downturn.
The Math Behind DCA
If you invest $100 monthly for 12 months, you buy more shares when the price is $8 and fewer when it is $12. Your average cost per share will be lower than the average price over that period. This is because you automatically buy more shares at lower prices, weighting your average cost downward.
When DCA Works Best
DCA shines in volatile or declining markets where prices fluctuate significantly. In a steadily rising market, a lump sum investment would outperform DCA because you would have more money working for you earlier. However, since nobody can predict market direction consistently, DCA provides a disciplined approach that works across different market conditions.
Best Practices for Dollar-Cost Averaging
Automate Your Investments
Set up automatic transfers from your bank to your investment account. This ensures you invest consistently without having to remember each period. Most brokerages offer automatic investment plans.
Choose Low-Cost Index Funds
For most investors, broad market index funds are the best choice for DCA. They have low fees, instant diversification, and historically solid returns. Expense ratios under 0.10% are ideal.
Stay Consistent Through Market Swings
The hardest part of DCA is continuing to invest when markets are falling. This is exactly when you should keep buying. Your fixed amount purchases more shares at lower prices, setting you up for better returns when markets recover.
Increase Contributions Over Time
As your income grows, increase your DCA amount annually. Even small increases compound significantly over decades. Many investors automatically increase contributions by 1-2% each year.