How to Rebalance Your Portfolio (Simple 3-Step Guide)

“Buy Low, Sell High” is the oldest rule in investing, yet most people fail to do it. Rebalancing forces you to do it mechanically, ensuring your risk never exceeds your comfort zone.

BMT Investment Research Team BMT Investment Research Team · 📅 Jan 2026 · ⏱️ 5 min read · INVESTING › STRATEGY
Frequency
1 Year
StandardTarget
Threshold
5% Drift
When to actRule
Goal
Risk Ctrl
Not just profitSafety

Why Doing Nothing is Dangerous

Imagine you started with a safe 60/40 split (60% Stocks, 40% Bonds). After a bull market, stocks grow faster than bonds.

Asset Class Original Target After 5 Years (No Action)
Stocks (High Risk) 60% 80% (Drifted)
Bonds (Safe) 40% 20% (Shrunk)
Risk Profile Balanced Aggressive
The Result?
If the market crashes now, you will lose much more money than you planned because your “safety cushion” (Bonds) has shrunk to only 20%.
Portfolio Risk Level
Target Risk Medium
Where you sleep well.
Drifted Risk High!
Accidental gambler.
Action Needed Sell Stocks
Move $ back to Bonds.
MethodTax Impact
Sell & BuyCapital Gains
New Cash$0 Tax

How to Execute a Rebalance

You don’t need to do this daily. Once a year (e.g., your birthday) is sufficient.

Step 1: Check Your Allocation

Log in and compare your Current % vs. Target %.
Example: Stocks are at 70%, but you want them at 60%. You are +10% overweight.

Step 2: The “New Cash” Trick (Tax-Smart)

Before you sell anything, try to fix the balance by adding new money.
Instead of selling the expensive stocks (which triggers tax), simply use your monthly deposit to buy only Bonds (the underweight asset) until the percentages align.

Step 3: Sell Winners (If Necessary)

If you don’t have new cash to add, you must sell the overweight asset.
Sell: 10% of Stocks.
Buy: Bonds with the proceeds.
Congratulations! You just sold high and bought low.

Time vs. Threshold

There are two schools of thought on when to pull the trigger.

  • Time-Based (Easiest): Do it once a year on a specific date. Simple, low maintenance.
  • Threshold-Based (Optimal): Do it only when an asset drifts by more than 5% (e.g., 60% → 65%). This captures market swings better but requires monitoring.

Robo-Advisor Note

If you use a Robo-Advisor (like Betterment or Wealthfront) or a Target Date Fund, do nothing. The algorithm rebalances for you automatically.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does rebalancing increase returns?
Not always. In a strong bull market, rebalancing (selling winners) might slightly lower your total return. Its primary goal is Risk Control, not maximizing profit. It saves you from the inevitable crash.
Should I rebalance my Crypto?
Yes, absolutely. Crypto is extremely volatile. If Bitcoin goes 3x, it might become 50% of your net worth. Rebalancing takes those profits off the table and puts them into stable assets (like a house or stocks).