Investing

DCA vs lump sum

You just came into $50,000. Should you invest it all today, or spread it out monthly over the next year to be safe? Almost everyone’s instinct is “spread it out.” Almost every published study says the instinct is wrong.

What the data actually says

Vanguard’s 2012 study, “Dollar-cost averaging just means taking risk later,” looked at rolling 10-year windows across the US, UK, and Australia. Lump-sum investing beat dollar-cost averaging in about two-thirds of all windows. The US specifically: 66%. UK: 64%. Australia: 67%.

The 2026 AAII update found the same shape with newer data — over 20-year horizons, lump sum won 73% of the time. The longer the DCA window you choose, the worse DCA performs against just deploying the money.

Over 20 years in S&P 500, lump sum beat DCA-2y by $13,994.

On a $50,000 investment, 19952015. DCA spreads the buys evenly across the first 2 years.

LumpDCA
Lump-sum final
$165,909
DCA final
$151,915
Asset CAGR
+6.2% / yr
Lump vs DCA
+$13,994

Why lump sum usually wins

Markets trend up roughly 70–75% of 12-month rolling periods. Sitting in cash during a positive-drift asset isn’t risk reduction — it’s a bet against the base rate. You’re not de-risking, you’re delaying exposure to expected return.

Every dollar you’re still planning to invest tomorrow is a dollar that didn’t earn anything today. Most of the time, that’s the trade.

The counterintuitive part

“But what if I invest at the top?” It turns out that helps lump sum, not DCA. AAII looked at periods that started at an all-time high: lump sum still won 91% of the time (256 out of 281 periods). The reason markets are at all-time highs is that they trend up — and that trend keeps going more often than not.

When DCA actually makes sense

DCA wins when the asset falls steadily after you invest. The 2000–2003 dot-com slide, the 2008 crash, 1974, 2022 — all windows where spreading purchases paid off. Try switching the asset above to gold and using a 2010 start: gold fell from 2011–2015, so DCA beats lump sum there.

The honest reason most people should DCA isn’t math — it’s behaviour. If you’d panic-sell after a 20% drop, lump-sum risk is real for you, and DCA is a hedge against your own regret reflex. Better to DCA and stay invested than lump-sum and bail at the bottom.

If regret risk is the issue, though, a lower stock allocation (say 60/40 with the calculator) is usually a more efficient hedge than DCA.