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Davit Cho
CEO & Crypto Tax Specialist | LegalMoneyTalk
Published: April 28, 2026 | 11 min read
๐ง davitchh@proton.me
The FOMC starts today. Bitcoin is testing $80K. Twitter is full of confident traders telling you exactly where the market goes tomorrow afternoon. And here's the truth that almost nobody wants to hear: the boring investor who DCA'd $100 a week into Bitcoin since 2020 has crushed 90% of the people you're listening to.
I've been advising crypto investors as a tax specialist for years. I review portfolios daily — exchange statements, transaction histories, gain/loss reports. There's a brutally consistent pattern: the clients with the best long-term returns aren't the ones with the most exotic strategies. They're the ones who set up an automated weekly buy and forgot about it.
This is the complete 2026 guide to Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) Bitcoin — what it is, why it works mathematically, real numbers from 2020–2026, the three strategies you can actually run, common mistakes I see in client returns, and the tax implications most articles never bother to mention.
⚡ TL;DR — DCA in 30 Seconds
- What: Buy a fixed dollar amount of Bitcoin on a regular schedule, regardless of price
- Why: Removes emotion + FOMO + market timing failure from the equation
- Real return: $100/week DCA since Jan 2020 = ~$32,500 invested → ~$95K+ today
- Beats lump sum? Lump sum wins ~65% of the time mathematically — but DCA wins behaviorally for almost everyone
- Tax tip: Each DCA buy is a separate cost-basis lot. Use Specific ID, not FIFO, to minimize taxes when selling
๐ What Is Dollar Cost Averaging, Really?
Dollar Cost Averaging is the simplest investment strategy ever invented: you invest the same dollar amount on the same schedule, no matter what the price is doing.
For example: $100 every Monday at 9 AM into Bitcoin. Forever. Whether BTC is at $30K, $80K, or $150K — you buy $100 worth.
That's it. That's the whole strategy.
The reason it works isn't magic. It's math + psychology:
- When prices drop, your $100 buys more BTC. You accidentally accumulate aggressively during fear.
- When prices spike, your $100 buys less BTC. You automatically slow down during euphoria.
- You never have to decide. No "is this the top?" No "should I wait for the dip?" The decision is already made for the next 10 years.
That last point is the secret. Almost every retail investor underperforms because they let emotion override their plan. DCA removes the plan from the emotion entirely.
๐งฎ The Math: Why DCA Beats Most Active Strategies
Let's run a simple example to show why this isn't theoretical:
| Week | BTC Price | $100 Buy | BTC Acquired |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $80,000 | $100 | 0.00125 |
| 2 | $70,000 | $100 | 0.00143 |
| 3 | $60,000 | $100 | 0.00167 |
| 4 | $70,000 | $100 | 0.00143 |
| 5 | $80,000 | $100 | 0.00125 |
| Total | Avg: $72K | $500 | 0.00703 BTC |
Notice something? The simple average of those 5 prices is $72,000. But because you bought more BTC at lower prices, your actual average cost is $71,124 — slightly better than the average price itself. That's the DCA math working in your favor.
Now extend this over 250 weeks (~5 years) with thousands of price fluctuations and you can see why timing the market by hand is so much harder than this automated approach.
⚖️ DCA vs Lump Sum vs Timing the Market
Here's the comparison nobody on Twitter wants to make honestly:
| Strategy | Avg Return (Math) | Avg Return (Reality) | Stress Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lump Sum | Higher ~65% of time | Mediocre (most panic-sell) | High |
| DCA | Lower ~65% of time | Best (people stay invested) | Lowest |
| Market Timing | Theoretically highest | Worst (90% of retail underperforms) | Extreme |
Yes — academically, lump sum wins about 65% of the time because markets generally go up. But that statistic assumes you actually stay invested after the lump sum drops 30%. Most people don't. They sell, lock in losses, and then never re-enter.
DCA wins not on the math, but on completion. The strategy you actually stick to beats the strategy that's theoretically optimal but you abandon at the worst moment.
๐ Real Numbers: $100/Week DCA Since 2020
Theory is great. Numbers are better. Let's run a real DCA scenario: $100 invested every Monday into Bitcoin starting January 6, 2020, through April 28, 2026 (today).
| Period | Total Invested | Approx. Portfolio Value | Net Return |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 (52 weeks) | $5,200 | ~$10,800 | +108% |
| 2021 (104 weeks) | $10,400 | ~$36,500 | +251% |
| 2022 (156 weeks) | $15,600 | ~$22,000 | +41% |
| 2023 (208 weeks) | $20,800 | ~$38,000 | +82% |
| 2024 (260 weeks) | $26,000 | ~$72,000 | +177% |
| 2025 (312 weeks) | $31,200 | ~$88,000 | +182% |
| Today (Apr 28, 2026) | ~$32,500 | ~$95,000+ | +192% |
A few things stand out:
- Even through the 2022 brutal bear market, the DCA portfolio stayed in profit. The disciplined buyer kept stacking sats while everyone else panicked.
- Total time spent on this strategy: zero. Set up auto-buy once. Done.
- Total stress: minimal. No checking charts. No FOMC anxiety. No sleepless nights.
- The result beats most active traders who claim they "outperformed."
Note: These are illustrative figures based on weekly closing prices. Actual results vary by exchange, fees, and exact timing. The principle holds.
๐ฏ Three DCA Strategies You Can Actually Run
Not all DCA is the same. Here are the three approaches I see working in client portfolios:
Strategy 1: Classic DCA (Recommended for Most)
Fixed dollar amount, fixed schedule, no exceptions.
- Example: $100 every Monday, automated
- Pros: Truly emotion-free, simplest to maintain
- Cons: No optimization for extreme dips
- Best for: 90% of investors. Including most professionals.
Strategy 2: Value-Based DCA
Same baseline buy, but increase the amount when prices fall significantly below your average cost basis.
- Example: $100/week baseline. If BTC drops more than 20% below your avg cost → $200 that week
- Pros: Captures extra value in deep dips
- Cons: Requires monitoring and discipline; tempting to skip
- Best for: Disciplined investors who actually do the rule
Strategy 3: Aggressive DCA / Income-Based
Tied to a percentage of income or a paycheck schedule.
- Example: 5% of every paycheck → BTC, automated on payday
- Pros: Scales naturally with income; treats BTC like a 401(k) contribution
- Cons: Higher concentration in a single asset
- Best for: High earners who already max out traditional retirement accounts
๐ง How to Set Up Auto-DCA in 2026
The whole point of DCA is automation. If you have to manually click "Buy" every week, you'll eventually stop. Here are the platforms that handle it for you in 2026:
| Platform | Best For | Fees | Min |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coinbase | Beginners, easiest UI | ~1.5% | $1 |
| Kraken | Lower fees, more control | ~0.26% | $10 |
| Strike | Bitcoin-only purists, best US fees | ~0.1% | $1 |
| Swan Bitcoin | BTC-only, withdraw to cold storage | ~1.0% | $10 |
| River | Long-term BTC stackers | ~1.2% | $10 |
My recommendation: If you want lowest fees and Bitcoin-only focus, Strike is hard to beat in 2026. If you want a full crypto exchange with DCA built in, Kraken. If you're brand new and want zero learning curve, Coinbase.
๐ New to all this? Start here: How to Buy Bitcoin in 2026: Beginner's Guide — then come back to set up DCA.
Critical tip: If you're DCA'ing more than $100/week, periodically withdraw your accumulated BTC to a hardware wallet. The exchange is for buying, not for storing. Here's the wallet security guide.
⚠️ 6 DCA Mistakes I See in Client Portfolios
1. Stopping when prices drop. This is the #1 portfolio killer. The 2022 bear market wasn't a tragedy for DCA'ers — it was the best accumulation window of the cycle. Pausing during fear means you miss the entire point of the strategy.
2. Starting too aggressively. Better to DCA $50/week for 5 years than $500/week for 3 months until your budget breaks. Sustainability beats size.
3. Not automating it. Manual DCA = eventually skipped DCA. If your platform supports recurring buys, use them. If it doesn't, switch platforms.
4. Buying altcoins on the same DCA schedule. Most altcoins go to zero. DCA into BTC (and maybe ETH). Speculate on alts separately with money you can lose.
5. Constantly checking the price. The whole psychological benefit of DCA is freedom from price-watching. If you check daily, you're erasing the benefit.
6. Failing to track cost basis for taxes. 250+ small buys means 250+ tax lots. Without proper tracking software, your tax filing becomes a nightmare. More on this below.
๐ผ Tax Implications: The Part Most Articles Skip
This is where my Crypto Tax Specialist hat goes on. Most DCA articles online completely ignore taxes — and it costs investors thousands.
Key insight: Each DCA buy creates a separate tax lot with its own cost basis and acquisition date. When you eventually sell, the IRS looks at which specific lots you sold.
Three things every DCA'er must understand:
1. Cost-basis method matters. By default, US filers use FIFO (First In, First Out) — meaning your oldest, lowest-cost BTC gets sold first when you exit. That maximizes your taxable gain. Specific Identification lets you choose which lots to sell — usually the highest-cost ones, minimizing taxes. As of 2026, this is required per-wallet, not portfolio-wide.
2. Long-term vs short-term holdings. BTC held more than 1 year = long-term capital gains rate (0%, 15%, or 20%). Less than 1 year = ordinary income rates (up to 37%). With DCA, your oldest lots qualify for long-term first. Plan exits accordingly.
3. 1099-DA in 2026. Exchanges now report your transactions directly to the IRS via Form 1099-DA. They report each sale, but the cost basis they report may be wrong (especially if you transferred BTC between platforms). Track your own basis. Full 1099-DA guide here.
4. Tax-loss harvesting opportunity. When DCA'ing through a downturn, some of your recent lots will be at a loss. You can harvest those specific lots to offset gains elsewhere — without disturbing your overall position. This is where DCA + tax strategy becomes genuinely powerful.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How much should I DCA into Bitcoin?
A: Start with what you can sustain for 5+ years without changing your lifestyle. For most people that's 1–10% of monthly income. Sustainability beats size — $50/week forever beats $500/week for 6 months.
Q: Weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly DCA — which is best?
A: Mathematically the differences are tiny. Pick whatever matches your paycheck schedule. The frequency that you'll actually maintain is the right one.
Q: Should I DCA into BTC and ETH, or just BTC?
A: For pure DCA discipline, BTC-only is simplest. If you want diversification within crypto, a 70/30 BTC/ETH split is a defensible middle ground. Avoid DCA'ing into altcoins — most underperform BTC long-term.
Q: Should I pause my DCA when the FOMC is meeting (like today)?
A: No. The whole point of DCA is to ignore events like this. The investors who tried to time around macro events in 2020-2025 mostly underperformed. Today's FOMC is exactly the kind of moment DCA was designed to ignore.
Q: Is DCA still effective if Bitcoin is "too high" already?
A: This is what people asked at $1K, $10K, $30K, and $60K. If you believe BTC has long-term upside from current levels, DCA is the lowest-stress way to gain exposure. If you don't, don't DCA at all — pick a different asset.
Q: When should I stop DCA'ing?
A: Common rules: (1) when you reach a target portfolio percentage, (2) when you retire and shift to selling, or (3) when your thesis on Bitcoin changes. Most long-term holders never fully stop — they just slow down.
Q: Can I DCA inside a retirement account?
A: Yes, through self-directed IRAs (e.g., iTrustCapital, Alto) or Bitcoin ETFs (IBIT, FBTC) inside a regular brokerage IRA. The ETF route is simpler and gets long-term capital gains treatment if held more than a year — though you don't have direct ownership of the BTC.
๐ Bottom Line + Action Plan
DCA is not exciting. It will not make you a Twitter celebrity. It will not give you a great story to tell at parties.
What it will do is quietly outperform 90% of the people who are actively trying to outperform it. And it does so while you sleep, work, and live your life.
If you want to start today, here's the 5-minute action plan:
- Pick a platform. Strike for low fees, Kraken for full features, Coinbase for ease.
- Pick an amount. Whatever you can sustain for 5+ years.
- Pick a day. Aligned with your paycheck.
- Set up the recurring buy. Automated, every week or every paycheck.
- Don't check the price. Seriously. Set a calendar reminder for 12 months from now to revisit.
The FOMC meets today. Bitcoin tests $80K. Twitter is hysterical. Meanwhile, somewhere, an investor's recurring buy is silently executing for the 213th week in a row. That investor is winning, and they don't even know what time the press conference starts.
Be that investor.
— Davit Cho, LegalMoneyTalk
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Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency investments are highly volatile and risky. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Historical DCA returns are illustrative and based on weekly closing prices; actual results vary by exchange, fees, and exact timing. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. All data cited reflects sources available as of April 28, 2026.



















