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Savings Plan vs. Lump Sum: Which is Better?

IF
Indexfonds Team
Ultimo aggiornamento: 25.05.2026

Lump Sum vs. Savings Plan: The Great Debate

When you have a significant amount of money to invest (e.g., from an inheritance or a bonus), the biggest question is often: "Should I put it all in at once, or should I wait?" This is the classic battle between Lump Sum and DCA (Dollar Cost Averaging).

The Lump Sum Approach

Investing everything on day one is statistically the most profitable choice.
- The Reason: Markets tend to go up over time. The longer your money is in the market, the more time it has to grow.
- The Catch: It is psychologically difficult. If the market crashes 10% the week after you invest, you will feel the pain.

The Savings Plan (DCA) Approach

Alternatively, you can split your investment into equal parts over 6, 12, or 24 months.
- The Benefit: You benefit from the Cost-Average Effect. When prices are high, you buy fewer shares; when prices are low, you buy more. This smooths out your entry price.
- The Reason: It is a powerful tool to overcome "Analysis Paralysis" or the fear of a market peak.

Which One Should You Choose?

| Goal | Best Choice |
| :--- | :--- |
| Max Math Return | Lump Sum (in ~66% of historical cases) |
| Emotional Peace | Savings Plan / DCA |
| Consistent Habits | Savings Plan (Monthly contributions) |

Conclusion

If you can ignore the noise, Time in the market beats timing the market. However, if a large one-time investment would make you lose sleep, splitting it into a 12-month savings plan is a perfectly valid and professional strategy. Consistency is more important than the perfect start date.

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Informazioni su questa guida
  • Livello: Classi di Attività
  • Formato: Analisi tecnica
  • Lettori: Contenuto verificato
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