Fast answer
DCA-bot signal checks prove whether scheduled buys were transparent or just hindsight averaging.
Before accepting a DCA-bot signal result, record the initial plan, buy cadence, order amount, trigger condition, maximum allocation, fees, exchange, pause rule, and final position history.
If a provider shows a lower average entry after adding capital but does not show the original schedule and maximum exposure, the DCA proof is weak.
DCA checks
What to inspect in crypto DCA bot signal records.
Schedule
The record should show whether buys were time-based, price-based, indicator-based, or manually changed after entry.
Allocation cap
A DCA plan needs a maximum capital limit so averaging does not turn into uncontrolled loss expansion.
Average price trail
Each added order should preserve timestamp, price, size, fee, and resulting average entry.
Exit or pause rule
A reviewable DCA signal explains when the bot stops adding, takes profit, pauses, or closes.
Source context
Dollar-cost averaging means investing fixed amounts at regular intervals.
Binance Academy describes dollar-cost averaging as investing a fixed amount at regular intervals to reduce the effect of volatility. Binance's trading-bot guide also lists Spot DCA and Auto-Invest separately from grid and arbitrage bots. A DCA-bot signal should therefore be checked for schedule discipline, capital limits, and final exposure rather than judged from a single averaged entry.
Review standard
A reviewable DCA bot signal connects every add-on order to the original plan.
For CSR evidence review, DCA bot records should include initial setup, schedule, order amount, maximum allocation, asset, venue, fees, pause and exit rules, every add-on order, remaining exposure, and final status.