Estimate DCA accumulation for periodic investing. This dedicated page is built for fast, clean calculations and search visibility.
Enter your values, click calculate, and see the result instantly. The page uses a simple, focused layout to improve usability on mobile and desktop.
How to use this calculator
- Open the dollar-cost averaging calculator page.
- Enter the required values in the form fields.
- Click Calculate to see the result and breakdown.
- Use the related links to explore similar tools.
How Dollar Cost Averaging works
Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) โ called Rupee Cost Averaging (RCA) in India โ is investing a fixed amount at regular intervals regardless of asset price. When prices are low, your fixed amount buys more units. When prices are high, it buys fewer. Over time, this results in an average purchase price lower than the arithmetic average price over the period.
DCA is mathematically equivalent to SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) in mutual funds. The primary benefit is behavioral: it removes the temptation to time the market and enforces consistent investment discipline. It's particularly powerful in volatile assets like equity and cryptocurrency where price fluctuations are large.
DCA vs. lump sum investment
- In a consistently rising market (bull run), lump sum investing outperforms DCA because you gain from the full appreciation on the entire amount from day 1.
- In a volatile or falling market, DCA outperforms lump sum because it averages down the purchase cost.
- Since no one can reliably predict market direction, DCA removes this decision entirely โ which is its most valuable feature for most investors.
DCA is widely recommended for crypto due to extreme price volatility. Bitcoin's historical drawdowns of 70โ80% make lump sum timing extremely high-risk. Most Indian crypto exchanges (CoinDCX, Binance) support automatic periodic purchases for consistent DCA execution.