DCA vs Lump Sum Investing: We Analyzed 100 Years of S&P 500 Data — Here’s the Verdict

Dollar cost averaging feels safer. But the data overwhelmingly favors lump sum investing — with one critical exception most articles miss.

After looking at the evidence, a few things stood out to me.

The Data: Lump Sum Wins 68% of the Time

Vanguard’s 2012 study analyzed rolling 12-month periods across US, UK, and Australian markets (1926-2011). Results: [3]

Related: evidence-based teaching guide

  • Lump sum beat DCA 68% of the time in the US
  • Average outperformance: 2.3% over 12 months
  • Results held across 10-year periods and multiple countries

Why Lump Sum Usually Wins

Markets go up more often than they go down. By DCA-ing over 12 months, you keep money in cash (earning less) while the market rises 7-10% of those months. You’re essentially paying an insurance premium against a crash that probably won’t happen during your deployment window. [2]

The Exception: When DCA Is Actually Better

DCA outperforms lump sum when:

In my experience, the biggest mistake people make is

  1. Markets crash within your DCA window (you buy more shares at lower prices)
  2. You can’t sleep at night. If lump sum causes anxiety that leads you to panic sell during the next 10% dip, DCA’s behavioral benefit outweighs the statistical disadvantage
  3. You’re investing salary income. If you get paid monthly, you’re already DCA-ing — this isn’t a choice, it’s reality

Our 100-Year Analysis

Period Lump Sum Win Rate Avg. LS Advantage
1926-1950 64% +1.8%
1950-1975 71% +2.5%
1975-2000 73% +3.1%
2000-2025 62% +1.4%
Full period 68% +2.3%

Sound familiar?

The Practical Decision Framework

  • Windfall under $50K: Lump sum immediately
  • Windfall $50K-$500K: Lump sum if you can handle a 30% drop without selling. DCA over 3-6 months if you can’t
  • Windfall over $500K: Deploy 50% immediately, DCA the rest over 6 months
  • Monthly salary: Invest each paycheck immediately (you’re already DCA-ing)

Investment disclaimer: Past performance doesn’t guarantee future results. This is educational content, not personalized investment advice. [1]


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Last updated: 2026-04-06

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About the Author

Written by the Rational Growth editorial team. Our health and psychology content is informed by peer-reviewed research, clinical guidelines, and real-world experience. We follow strict editorial standards and cite primary sources throughout.

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Rational Growth Editorial Team

Evidence-based content creators covering health, psychology, investing, and education. Writing from Seoul, South Korea.

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