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Crypto & Stablecoin

Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA)

Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) is an investment strategy of making recurring fixed-dollar purchases of an asset to reduce the impact of price volatility.

Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) is the practice of investing a fixed dollar amount in an asset at regular intervals — regardless of the asset's current price. By spreading purchases over time, investors buy more shares/coins when prices are low and fewer when prices are high, resulting in a lower average cost basis compared to making a single large purchase at one potentially-high price point.

For Bitcoin and crypto payroll, DCA is a core concept. An employee or contractor who elects to receive $500 per month in Bitcoin is automatically dollar-cost averaging — they receive more BTC when Bitcoin is $30,000 and less when it's $60,000. Over years, this smooths out volatility and reduces the risk of buying entirely at a market peak.

Bitwage's W2 crypto benefit program is designed as an automatic DCA mechanism: employees elect a fixed monthly USD amount for Bitcoin or Ethereum allocation, and Bitwage executes the conversion on each payroll cycle. Contractors can configure recurring payment schedules similarly. DCA doesn't guarantee profit and doesn't protect against a sustained decline in asset price, but it is widely considered a responsible approach to long-term crypto accumulation for payroll recipients.

Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA) FAQ

Common questions about dollar-cost averaging (dca) in the context of international payments.

Employees using the w2 crypto benefit elect a fixed dollar amount (e.g., $500/month) to convert to Bitcoin or Ethereum on each payroll cycle. Bitwage executes the conversion at the market price on the conversion date. Over time, this creates an automatic DCA strategy without requiring manual trades.

DCA is particularly popular for bitcoin payments due to Bitcoin's high volatility. Historical DCA analysis shows that investors who bought Bitcoin at fixed intervals over multi-year periods outperformed those who tried to time the market, even if their first purchase was at a local peak.

More Crypto & Stablecoin Terms

Expand your knowledge of international payment terminology.

Bitcoin DCA (Dollar-Cost Averaging)

Dollar-cost averaging into Bitcoin means buying a fixed dollar amount at regular intervals, regardless of price — reducing timing risk.

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Bitcoin Payments

Bitcoin payments involve sending BTC as direct compensation to contractors or employees — either as a payroll split, a full salary, or a recurring investment via DCA.

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Blockchain

A blockchain is a decentralized, immutable digital ledger that records transactions across a network of computers without requiring a central authority.

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CBDC (Central Bank Digital Currency)

A CBDC is a digital form of a country's national currency, issued and backed directly by the central bank — combining the programmability of crypto with sovereign monetary backing.

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Centralized Exchange (CEX)

A centralized exchange (CEX) is a crypto trading platform operated by a company that holds user funds and matches buy/sell orders through a central order book.

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Cold Storage

Cold storage refers to keeping crypto private keys on devices or media that are never connected to the internet, providing maximum security against hacks.

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Crypto Payroll

Crypto payroll is the practice of paying employees or contractors in cryptocurrency — Bitcoin, Ethereum, or stablecoins — either as full compensation or a partial allocation.

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Crypto Treasury

Crypto treasury management involves holding stablecoins or cryptocurrency as part of a company's cash reserves for payments, yield, or hedging purposes.

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Crypto Wallet

A crypto wallet is software or hardware that stores private keys and enables users to send, receive, and manage cryptocurrency and token balances on a blockchain.

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Cryptocurrency Exchange

A cryptocurrency exchange is a platform where users buy, sell, and trade digital assets like Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDC, and other tokens.

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DAI

DAI is a decentralized USD-pegged stablecoin issued by the MakerDAO protocol, maintained through crypto collateral rather than bank reserves.

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DAI Stablecoin

DAI is a decentralized, crypto-collateralized stablecoin issued by MakerDAO, designed to maintain a soft 1:1 peg to the US dollar without relying on fiat bank reserves.

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DeFi (Decentralized Finance)

DeFi refers to financial services — lending, trading, yield generation — built on public blockchains using smart contracts, without traditional financial intermediaries.

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Decentralized Exchange (DEX)

A decentralized exchange (DEX) enables peer-to-peer crypto trading via smart contracts without a central authority holding user funds.

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Digital Dollar

The digital dollar refers to either a US CBDC (government-issued) or dollar-pegged stablecoins (USDC, USDT) that function as digital representations of USD.

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Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT)

Distributed ledger technology (DLT) is a digital system for recording transactions across multiple locations simultaneously, with no central administrator.

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ERC-20 Token

ERC-20 is the standard token format on the Ethereum blockchain, used by USDC, USDT, DAI, and thousands of other tokens.

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Ethereum Payments

Ethereum payments involve sending ETH or ERC-20 tokens (like USDC) to contractors and employees as compensation, leveraging Ethereum's programmable blockchain infrastructure.

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Gas Fee

A gas fee is the transaction cost paid to blockchain validators for processing and confirming a cryptocurrency transaction on networks like Ethereum.

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Gas Fees (Blockchain)

Gas fees are the transaction costs paid to blockchain validators to process and confirm a transaction on a proof-of-work or proof-of-stake network.

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Layer 2 (L2)

Layer 2 (L2) networks are secondary blockchain protocols built on top of Layer 1 chains (like Ethereum) to increase speed and reduce transaction costs.

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Layer 2 Payments

Layer 2 (L2) networks are blockchain scaling solutions built on top of a base layer (like Ethereum) that process transactions off-chain for lower fees and faster confirmation.

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Lightning Network

The Lightning Network is a Layer 2 payment protocol built on Bitcoin, enabling instant, low-fee BTC transactions for everyday payments.

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Off-Ramp

A crypto off-ramp converts cryptocurrency or stablecoins back into fiat currency, enabling users to access their crypto earnings in traditional bank accounts.

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On-Chain Payment Tracking

On-chain tracking is real-time visibility into crypto payment status via blockchain explorers — providing immutable, publicly verifiable proof of every transaction.

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On-Ramp

A crypto on-ramp is a service that converts traditional fiat currency (USD, EUR, etc.) into cryptocurrency or stablecoins, enabling entry into the crypto ecosystem.

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Private Key

A private key is a secret cryptographic number that proves ownership of a blockchain address and authorizes transactions — the ultimate proof of ownership of crypto assets.

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Smart Contract

A smart contract is self-executing code deployed on a blockchain that automatically enforces agreement terms when predefined conditions are met.

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Stablecoin

A stablecoin is a cryptocurrency designed to maintain a stable value by pegging to a reserve asset like the US dollar, making it suitable for payments and payroll.

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Stablecoin Payroll

Stablecoin payroll is paying contractors or employees in dollar-pegged cryptocurrencies like USDC or USDT instead of traditional bank transfers.

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Stablecoin Peg

A stablecoin peg is the mechanism that maintains a stablecoin's value at a fixed ratio to a reference asset (usually $1 USD), using reserves, collateral, or algorithmic supply controls.

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Tether (USDT)

Tether (USDT) is the world's largest stablecoin by market cap, pegged 1:1 to the US dollar and used extensively for crypto trading and international value transfer.

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USDC

USDC is a dollar-pegged stablecoin issued by Circle, fully backed by cash and US Treasuries, and available on Ethereum, Solana, Base, and other blockchains.

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USDT (Tether)

USDT is the world's largest stablecoin by market cap, issued by Tether Limited and widely used for international payments and crypto-to-fiat conversion.

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