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Dollar-cost averaging: investing without timing the market

6 min readUpdated June 2026

You have money set aside to invest, and a quiet voice in your head keeps asking the same question: is now a good time to buy? Maybe prices feel high. Maybe the news feels scary. So you wait. Then prices move, and you feel like you missed your window, or dodged a bullet, and the waiting starts all over again.

Dollar-cost averaging, usually shortened to DCA, is the simple discipline that gets you out of that loop. Instead of trying to pick the perfect moment, you invest a fixed dollar amount on a regular schedule โ€” say the same amount every payday โ€” no matter what the market is doing that day.

How dollar-cost averaging works

The clever part is built right into the dollars. When you spend a fixed amount each time, the price per share decides how many shares you get. When prices are low, your money buys more shares. When prices are high, it buys fewer. You are quietly buying more when things are cheap and less when things are expensive โ€” the opposite of what scared investors tend to do.

You never have to predict anything. You just keep the dollar amount steady and let the share count float. Over time, that pulls your average cost per share down compared with buying the same number of shares each period.

A worked example over four bumpy months

Say you invest $300 on the first of each month into a fund. The price bounces around, the way real markets do:

  • Month 1: price $30/share. $300 buys 10 shares.
  • Month 2: price $20/share. $300 buys 15 shares.
  • Month 3: price $25/share. $300 buys 12 shares.
  • Month 4: price $50/share. $300 buys 6 shares.

Over four months you invested $1,200 total and ended up with 43 shares. Your average cost per share is $1,200 divided by 43, which is about $27.91.

Now compare that with the simple average of the four prices: $30, $20, $25 and $50 average out to $31.25. Your actual cost โ€” $27.91 โ€” came in lower. That gap is the quiet benefit of DCA. Because your fixed dollars scooped up extra shares in the cheap months and fewer in the pricey month, your blended price landed below the plain average of the prices you saw.

It is not magic, and it does not guarantee a profit. But it does mean your worst enemy โ€” the urge to buy big right before a drop โ€” has a lot less room to hurt you.

Time in the market beats timing the market

There is an old line among long-term investors: time in the market beats timing the market. The point is that staying invested across many years tends to matter far more than nailing the entry day. Markets have historically trended upward over long stretches, with plenty of ugly dips along the way. Money that sits on the sidelines waiting for the all-clear misses the recoveries, which often come fast and without warning.

DCA keeps you in. By committing to invest on a schedule, you stay invested through the scary stretches โ€” which, in hindsight, are usually the most valuable times to be buying. You trade the fantasy of a perfect entry for the reliability of always showing up.

Lump sum vs. DCA: the honest nuance

Here is a fair point you will hear: if you already have a big pile of cash sitting around, investing it all at once โ€” a lump sum โ€” has often, on average, beaten spreading it out. That is because markets rise more often than they fall, so money invested earlier simply has more time to grow.

So why does anyone DCA a windfall? Because averages are cold comfort the day after you put everything in and the market drops. DCA over a few months can lower the odds of that gut-punch scenario, and that emotional protection is worth real money if it stops you from panic-selling at the bottom.

A useful way to think about it: most people are not choosing between lump sum and DCA at all. They are investing money as they earn it โ€” a slice of every paycheck. That is dollar-cost averaging by default, and it is a perfectly good way to build wealth. The lump-sum debate only applies when you happen to be holding a large sum all at once, like a bonus or an inheritance.

Common mistakes to avoid

Two traps catch people who think they are dollar-cost averaging:

  • Pausing when it gets scary. The whole point is to keep buying through the dips, because those are the cheap-share months. Skipping your contribution during a downturn quietly cancels the main benefit.
  • Letting fees and taxes eat the edge. Tiny per-trade commissions barely matter today, but funds with high expense ratios drag on you every single year. Inside a regular brokerage account, frequent buying can also create more taxable record-keeping. Favor low-cost, broadly diversified funds and let them compound.

What to do this week

Pick one number you can invest comfortably every payday, and automate it. Most brokerages and retirement plans let you set a recurring transfer and a recurring buy, so the money moves before you can talk yourself out of it. Automating it removes the timing decision entirely โ€” there is no day to second-guess, because the schedule already decided.

Then leave it alone. Check in a couple of times a year, not a couple of times a day. If you want to see how a steady monthly amount might grow over the years, run your number through an investment growth calculator before you start, so the long game feels real instead of abstract.

Dollar-cost averaging will not make you the person who bought at the exact bottom. It will make you the person who kept buying, stayed invested, and let time do the heavy lifting โ€” which, for most of us, is the version that actually ends up ahead. This is general education, not personalized financial advice.

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