Crypto Portfolio Allocation Calculator
Build a crypto portfolio allocation from risk tolerance, market cap tiers, and sector exposure.
Formula
Position Amount = Total Portfolio x (Allocation % / 100)
Each position size is calculated by multiplying the total portfolio value by the target allocation percentage. Expected returns and drawdowns are weighted averages based on historical performance of each market cap tier.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Moderate Risk $10,000 Portfolio
Problem: Build a $10,000 crypto portfolio with moderate risk: 40% BTC, 25% ETH, 15% large-cap, 10% mid-cap, 5% small-cap, 5% stablecoins.
Solution: Bitcoin: $10,000 x 40% = $4,000\nEthereum: $10,000 x 25% = $2,500\nLarge-cap alts: $10,000 x 15% = $1,500\nMid-cap alts: $10,000 x 10% = $1,000\nSmall-cap alts: $10,000 x 5% = $500\nStablecoins: $10,000 x 5% = $500\nExpected annual return: ~41% | Max drawdown: ~58%
Result: 6 positions | Risk Score: 5.9/10 | Expected Value: $14,100 | Worst Case: $4,200
Example 2: Conservative $50,000 Portfolio
Problem: Build a $50,000 conservative crypto portfolio: 50% BTC, 25% ETH, 10% large-cap, 5% mid-cap, 0% small-cap, 10% stablecoins.
Solution: Bitcoin: $50,000 x 50% = $25,000\nEthereum: $50,000 x 25% = $12,500\nLarge-cap alts: $50,000 x 10% = $5,000\nMid-cap alts: $50,000 x 5% = $2,500\nStablecoins: $50,000 x 10% = $5,000\nExpected annual return: ~34% | Max drawdown: ~50%
Result: 5 positions | Risk Score: 5.1/10 | Expected Value: $67,000 | Worst Case: $25,000
Frequently Asked Questions
How should I allocate my crypto portfolio?
Crypto portfolio allocation should reflect your risk tolerance, investment timeline, and knowledge level. A conservative allocation typically places fifty to sixty percent in Bitcoin, twenty to thirty percent in Ethereum, and the remainder in large-cap altcoins and stablecoins. This provides exposure to the crypto market's growth potential while maintaining relative stability through blue-chip assets. Moderate portfolios reduce Bitcoin dominance to thirty-five to forty-five percent and add meaningful allocations to mid-cap altcoins with strong fundamentals. Aggressive portfolios may allocate only twenty to thirty percent to Bitcoin and distribute the rest across altcoins with higher growth potential but significantly more risk. Regardless of your risk profile, maintaining some stablecoin allocation provides dry powder to buy during market dips and reduces overall portfolio volatility.
What percentage should Bitcoin represent in a crypto portfolio?
Bitcoin should typically represent the largest single allocation in any crypto portfolio, with most advisors recommending a minimum of twenty-five percent and many suggesting forty to sixty percent for most investors. Bitcoin's dominance is justified by its status as the most liquid, widely adopted, and institutionally accepted cryptocurrency with the longest track record. It has the lowest volatility among major crypto assets and serves as the benchmark against which all other crypto investments are measured. During bear markets, Bitcoin typically loses less value than altcoins, and during bull markets, it usually leads the recovery. Even aggressive portfolios should maintain at least twenty percent in Bitcoin as a foundation. The only exception might be very small speculative portfolios under one thousand dollars where the investor is comfortable with total loss and seeks maximum upside potential from higher-risk altcoins.
Why include stablecoins in a crypto portfolio?
Stablecoins serve several critical strategic functions in a crypto portfolio beyond simply holding cash on the sidelines. First, they provide immediate dry powder to deploy during market crashes or flash dips without waiting for bank transfers that can take one to five business days. Second, stablecoins can earn yield through lending protocols, liquidity provision, or staking at rates of three to eight percent annually, making them productive assets rather than idle cash. Third, maintaining a stablecoin allocation reduces overall portfolio volatility and provides psychological comfort during drawdowns. Fourth, having stablecoins ready on exchanges allows you to capture time-sensitive opportunities in DeFi or during token launches. A five to fifteen percent stablecoin allocation is appropriate for most investors. During late bull markets, increasing stablecoin allocation to twenty to thirty percent by taking profits from appreciated assets is a common risk management technique.
How often should I rebalance my crypto portfolio?
Portfolio rebalancing should occur either on a calendar basis or when allocations drift beyond predetermined thresholds. Calendar-based rebalancing is typically done monthly or quarterly by selling overweight positions and buying underweight ones to restore target allocations. Threshold-based rebalancing triggers when any asset drifts more than five to ten percentage points from its target allocation, which in volatile crypto markets can happen within days. Monthly rebalancing captures volatility harvesting benefits without excessive trading fees, while weekly rebalancing incurs higher costs that may outweigh the benefits. During strong trending markets, some investors use a less frequent rebalancing schedule to let winners run longer. Tax implications are important to consider since every rebalancing sale is a taxable event. Some investors only rebalance by deploying new capital into underweight positions rather than selling overweight positions, which avoids triggering capital gains taxes.
Should I include DeFi tokens and layer-2 tokens in my portfolio?
DeFi tokens and layer-2 scaling solutions can provide valuable diversification and exposure to specific crypto sectors, but they should generally fall within your mid-cap or small-cap allocation rather than receiving their own separate allocation. DeFi tokens like AAVE, UNI, and MKR offer exposure to the decentralized finance ecosystem which is one of the most productive sectors in crypto, but they are also highly cyclical and can drop eighty percent or more during DeFi winter periods. Layer-2 tokens like MATIC, ARB, and OP provide exposure to scaling solutions that are essential for Ethereum's long-term success. When allocating to these sectors, consider the sector's total addressable market, the token's role within its protocol (governance, fee sharing, staking), and the competitive dynamics between similar projects. Avoid concentrating more than five percent of your portfolio in any single altcoin regardless of conviction.
How does risk tolerance affect crypto allocation?
Risk tolerance fundamentally shapes every aspect of portfolio construction from asset selection to position sizing and drawdown expectations. Conservative investors with low risk tolerance should allocate sixty to seventy-five percent to Bitcoin and Ethereum combined, with the remainder in large-cap altcoins and stablecoins, accepting lower upside potential in exchange for smaller drawdowns. Moderate risk tolerance allows for a more balanced distribution across market cap tiers with Bitcoin and Ethereum at fifty to sixty-five percent and meaningful positions in mid-cap altcoins. Aggressive investors comfortable with the possibility of losing seventy to ninety percent of portfolio value might allocate only thirty to forty percent to Bitcoin and Ethereum while loading up on high-potential altcoins. Risk tolerance should be assessed honestly by imagining how you would react if your portfolio dropped by fifty percent tomorrow. If the answer involves panic selling, your allocation is too aggressive regardless of your intellectual risk appetite.