🧭 Portfolio Mix Tool

Asset Allocation Calculator

Check whether your current portfolio still matches your target risk profile across stocks, bonds, cash, real estate, and alternatives.

Your portfolio

Current dollars and target weights
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Planning Placement

Portfolio checkup template

Use this space for an asset allocation tracker, rebalancing spreadsheet, or investor checklist.

View Resource

Asset allocation calculator guide

This calculator shows how your portfolio is currently divided and how far it is from a chosen target allocation. It is useful before rebalancing or checking whether a portfolio has become too stock-heavy, too conservative, or too cash-heavy.

How to use it

  • Enter the current dollar amount in each asset bucket.
  • Choose a preset target profile or enter a custom target.
  • Review the buy/sell difference needed to reach the target.

Calculation method

Current weight = asset value ÷ total portfolio

The calculator compares current weights with target weights and converts the gap into dollar amounts.

Common mistake

Do not treat an allocation as a prediction. It is a risk-control framework. A portfolio can be mathematically balanced and still lose value during market declines.

FAQ

What is a good asset allocation?

It depends on time horizon, risk tolerance, income stability, and withdrawal needs. Common examples are 60/40, 80/20, and 90/10 stock/bond mixes.

Should cash be part of my portfolio?

Cash can reduce volatility and fund short-term needs, but too much cash may lower long-term growth.

How often should I check allocation?

Many investors check quarterly or annually, or rebalance when an asset class drifts more than a chosen threshold.

Example Scenario

Use realistic assumptions to understand how changes in allocation, withdrawal rates, inflation, and portfolio management decisions can affect long-term financial outcomes.

Common Mistakes

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I review my plan? At least annually.

Should I use conservative assumptions? Yes, especially for retirement planning.