Bitcoin DCA Calculator
Simulate a dollar-cost averaging strategy for Bitcoin. Enter your recurring purchase amount, time period, and expected growth to project how much BTC you would accumulate and what your portfolio would be worth.
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What Is Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA)?
Dollar-cost averaging is an investment strategy where you invest a fixed amount of money at regular intervals, regardless of the asset's current price. Instead of trying to time the market � buying at the perfect low and selling at the peak � DCA removes emotion from investing and ensures consistent, disciplined accumulation over time.
When applied to Bitcoin, DCA is particularly powerful because of Bitcoin's extreme volatility. Bitcoin can swing 30-50% in a single month, making it nearly impossible to time entries correctly. With DCA, you automatically buy more BTC when prices are low and less BTC when prices are high, resulting in a lower average cost basis than the average market price.
For example, if you invest $100/week into Bitcoin over 3 years, you would invest $15,600 total. During price dips (which feel scary), your $100 buys more Bitcoin. During price spikes (which feel exciting), your $100 buys less. Over time, this smooths out volatility and has historically produced strong returns. Read more about this approach in our Bitcoin DCA strategy guide.
Historical Performance of Bitcoin DCA
Bitcoin DCA has been remarkably profitable over nearly any multi-year period since Bitcoin's inception:
- $10/day since 2017: $25,550 invested ? worth over $100,000+ (varies by exact dates)
- $50/week since 2019: $13,000 invested ? worth $30,000-$50,000+ depending on end date
- $100/month since 2015: $10,800 invested ? worth over $150,000+ by late 2024
Even investors who started DCA at Bitcoin's all-time high of $69,000 in November 2021 were profitable by 2024 because continued buying during the 2022 bear market dramatically lowered their average cost basis. The key lesson: time in the market beats timing the market, especially with a volatile asset like Bitcoin.
The worst thing most investors do is stop buying during bear markets � precisely when DCA provides the most value. Every dollar invested during a downturn buys significantly more BTC and has an outsized impact on your overall returns when prices recover.
DCA vs. Lump Sum: Which Is Better?
Academic research (like a famous Vanguard study) shows that lump sum investing outperforms DCA about 60-70% of the time in traditional markets. This is because markets tend to go up over time, so investing earlier captures more upside. However, Bitcoin is different from traditional assets in important ways:
- Much higher volatility: Bitcoin's 30-100% drawdowns make lump sum investing psychologically devastating. Buying $50,000 of BTC and watching it drop to $20,000 causes most investors to panic sell.
- Behavioral advantage: DCA keeps you invested through crashes. Unlike a lump sum investor who might sell at a loss, a DCA investor sees dips as opportunities to buy more cheaply.
- Risk management: If you have a large sum, consider a compromise � invest 50% immediately (lump sum) and DCA the remaining 50% over 6-12 months. This captures some upside while reducing timing risk.
- Regular income: Most people don't have a large lump sum to invest. DCA naturally aligns with receiving a regular paycheck � invest a portion of each paycheck automatically.
How to Set Up a Bitcoin DCA Strategy
Setting up a Bitcoin DCA plan is straightforward. Here is a step-by-step guide:
- Choose an exchange: Select a reputable exchange with recurring buy features. Major options include Coinbase, Kraken, River Financial, Swan Bitcoin, and Strike. Look for low fees � some exchanges charge 1.5-2.5% per transaction, while others charge as little as 0.3%.
- Set your amount: Determine how much you can comfortably invest each interval. Start small ($25-100/week) if you are new. Never invest money you might need within 1-2 years.
- Choose your frequency: Weekly is the most popular and provides good cost averaging. Monthly works too but provides less smoothing. Daily is available on some platforms but may incur more fees.
- Automate: Set up automatic recurring purchases. The whole point of DCA is to remove emotion and decision-making. If you manually buy each time, you will inevitably skip purchases during dips (the worst possible time to skip).
- Self-custody: Periodically withdraw your BTC to a personal hardware wallet. "Not your keys, not your coins" is a fundamental principle. Learn more in our crypto wallets guide.
Understanding Bitcoin's 4-Year Market Cycles
Bitcoin's price action has historically followed a 4-year cycle closely tied to the halving event � a programmed reduction of new BTC supply by 50% every ~210,000 blocks (approximately 4 years). Understanding these cycles helps frame your DCA expectations:
- Year 1 (Post-halving): Typically the strongest bull run year. Prices often increase 200-500% as reduced supply meets growing demand.
- Year 2: Often a peak and correction year. The bull market reaches euphoria, followed by a significant correction (50-80% drawdown historically).
- Year 3: Bear market / accumulation phase. Prices consolidate and may continue declining. This is the best time to DCA aggressively.
- Year 4 (Pre-halving): Recovery and anticipation phase. Prices begin recovering as the market anticipates the next halving's supply shock.
DCA shines across all four phases. You accumulate heavily during years 2-3 (low prices), and your accumulated BTC appreciates significantly during years 4 and 1 (the next cycle's bull run). This is why 3+ year DCA commitment is strongly recommended � it ensures you experience at least one full cycle.
Learn about blockchain fundamentals that drive Bitcoin's value in our blockchain basics article. For broader DCA applications beyond crypto, see our dollar-cost averaging guide.
