You've inherited $50,000 or sold an asset and have a large sum to invest. Should you put it all in the market today or spread it out over 6–12 months? This is the lump sum vs dollar-cost averaging (DCA) debate, and unlike many investing questions, the academic research has a fairly definitive answer — though the "right" choice depends as much on psychology as mathematics.
A landmark Vanguard study (and subsequent replications by other researchers) analyzed lump sum investing vs 12-month DCA across US, UK, and Australian equity markets over rolling 10-year periods. The findings were consistent: investing the full amount immediately outperformed DCA approximately two-thirds of the time across all markets and time periods studied.
The logic is straightforward: markets trend upward over time (the historical average is approximately 7–10% per year). Money that's invested immediately has more time in the market. Money held in cash while waiting for monthly DCA deployment earns much less. As Warren Buffett famously noted, "the stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient."
DCA outperforms lump sum when markets decline after the investment date. If you invest $50,000 in a lump sum and markets fall 25% in the following year, you wish you'd DCA'd. In this scenario, DCA provides a lower average purchase price.
The catch: market timing is notoriously difficult. The periods when markets "look scary" and DCA feels prudent are often exactly when markets subsequently rally. March 2020 (COVID crash) felt terrifying — the right call was investing immediately. Late 2021 felt euphoric — the right call was caution.
| Period | Lump Sum Result | 12-Month DCA Result | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 2010 (post-GFC) | +8.2% (Year 1) | +4.1% (avg deployed) | Lump Sum |
| Jan 2020 (pre-COVID) | -9.2% (Year 1) | -4.8% (avg deployed) | DCA |
| Jan 2013 | +10.4% (Year 1) | +5.7% | Lump Sum |
| Jan 2022 (rate hikes) | -12.1% (Year 1) | -7.8% | DCA |
| Jan 2017 | +7.8% (Year 1) | +3.9% | Lump Sum |
Illustrative examples. Actual returns vary. Past performance does not predict future results.
Even if lump sum investing is mathematically superior in expectation, the behavioural reality for many investors favours DCA:
A compromise between full lump sum and 12-month DCA: invest 50% immediately and DCA the remaining 50% over 3–6 months. This approach:
For a $100,000 investment: invest $50,000 immediately in XEQT, then $100/month for 5 months. Expected performance is between full lump sum and full 12-month DCA, with much lower regret risk than lump sum alone.
Canadian investors receiving a large USD inheritance or asset sale face an additional consideration: currency risk. If the Canadian dollar strengthens 5% against the USD while you're deploying cash over 6 months, your purchasing power increases. If the CAD weakens 5%, you lose money on the conversion. For large USD amounts, consider exchanging 50–75% immediately and the rest over 3–6 months — a natural currency averaging strategy built into your DCA schedule.
| Investor Type | Recommended Strategy |
|---|---|
| Experienced investor, high risk tolerance, long horizon | Lump sum immediately |
| First-time large investment, moderate anxiety | 3–6 month DCA |
| High anxiety, history of panic selling | 12-month DCA or robo-advisor |
| Regular employment income investor | DCA automatically (invest each paycheck) |
| Uncertain about the market "right now" | Lump sum — you can't predict the market, so don't try |
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Get KOHO Free →Last updated: March 2026. For informational purposes only. Not financial advice.