What $5,000 in Bitcoin in 2020 became
The year everything changed. Bitcoin crashed to ~$3,800 in the March COVID panic, then began one of the most powerful bull runs in its history, ending the year near $29,000 as institutions started buying.
If you had put $5,000 into Bitcoin at the start of 2020 — buying around $7,201 per BTC on January 01, 2020 — you would have acquired roughly 0.6944 BTC. At today's price of $65,750, that position is worth about $45,654, a return of +813% (9.1x your money).
Lump sum vs dollar-cost averaging
The figure above assumes a single lump-sum buy at the start of 2020. If you had instead spread that same $5,000 into equal weekly purchases from 2020 until today, it would be worth about $11,727. Lump sum usually wins when you happen to buy near a market low, while dollar-cost averaging lowers your risk of buying right before a crash. There's no single right answer — it depends on the entry point and your risk tolerance.
Check any amount, coin, or date
These numbers are real, but they're just one scenario. Use the free DCA calculator to test any investment amount, any cryptocurrency, and any start date — with a live chart, ROI breakdown, and a side-by-side DCA vs lump-sum verdict.