Dollar Cost Averaging Calculator
Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) Calculator
Plan your dollar cost averaging strategy by projecting how regular periodic investments grow over time. Enter your contribution amount, frequency, number of periods, and expected return to estimate your portfolio's future value.
DCA Parameters
Results
INSTRUCTIONS
How to Use This Calculator
1. Set Investment Amount
Enter the fixed dollar amount you plan to invest each period. DCA works best with a consistent, affordable contribution.
2. Choose Frequency
Select how often you will invest: weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly. More frequent investing provides slightly smoother cost averaging.
3. Set Number of Periods
Enter the total number of investment periods. For example, 60 monthly periods equals 5 years of consistent investing.
4. Review Projections
See your estimated portfolio value, total amount invested, total gains, and overall return percentage update in real time.
EDUCATION
Understanding 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's price. When prices are high, your fixed amount buys fewer shares. When prices are low, the same amount buys more shares. Over time, this tends to lower your average cost per share compared to making a single lump-sum purchase at the wrong time.
The main advantage of DCA is that it removes the emotional challenge of trying to time the market. Instead of agonizing over whether now is the right time to invest, you simply invest consistently and let the strategy work through market cycles. This disciplined approach is especially effective for long-term goals like retirement savings or building a college fund.
While research shows that lump-sum investing produces higher returns about two-thirds of the time (because markets tend to rise), DCA produces better risk-adjusted results for investors who are sensitive to short-term losses. The psychological benefit of avoiding a large loss right after investing a lump sum can be worth more than the slightly higher expected return of investing all at once.
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