Forex Lot Size Calculator
A lot size calculator converts your risk parameters into the exact number of lots to trade. It computes Lot Size = (Account Balance × Risk %) ÷ (Stop Loss in Pips × Pip Value per Standard Lot). Enter balance, risk percentage, stop-loss distance, and pair; it returns standard, mini, and micro lots plus required margin.
- Formula: Standard Lots = (Balance × Risk %) ÷ (Stop-Loss Pips × Pip Value per Standard Lot). Example: ($10,000 × 1%) ÷ (50 pips × $10) = 0.20 standard lots.
- Lot conversions are fixed: 1 standard lot = 100,000 units = 10 mini lots = 100 micro lots. Mini lots = standard × 10; micro lots = standard × 100.
- Lot size and stop loss are inversely related at fixed risk — doubling the stop-loss distance halves the lot size for the same dollar risk.
- Risk levels are color-coded: 1% or less is safe (green), 1–2% is moderate (amber), above 2% is high (red). Pros typically risk 0.5–2% per trade.
- The tool also shows required margin across 1:30, 1:50, 1:100, 1:200 and 1:500 leverage so you can confirm the position fits your account before trading.
Forex Lot Size Calculator
Determine the correct lot size for any trade based on your account balance, risk tolerance, and stop loss distance.
How to Use the Lot Size Calculator
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Enter Your Account Balance
Input your current account balance and select your account currency. This is the starting point for all risk calculations.
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Set Your Risk Percentage
Use the slider or type a value to set how much of your account you want to risk on this trade. Most professionals recommend 0.5% to 2%. The calculator color-codes the risk level: green (safe), amber (moderate), red (high).
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Enter Your Stop Loss in Pips
Input the distance from your entry to your stop loss in pips. A wider stop loss will result in a smaller lot size to keep the same dollar risk.
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Select the Currency Pair
Choose the pair you plan to trade. The calculator auto-determines the pip value. If your account currency differs from the quote currency, enter the exchange rate when prompted.
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Review Your Results
The calculator shows your recommended lot size in standard, mini, and micro lots. Check the margin table to ensure your account can support the position at your leverage.
The 1% Rule — Why Pros Risk Small
The 1% rule is the most widely used risk management guideline in professional trading: never risk more than 1% of your account on any single trade. On a $10,000 account, that means your maximum loss per trade is $100.
Why is this so powerful? It's about surviving losing streaks. Even great traders lose 40-60% of their trades. Here's what happens to a $10,000 account during a 10-trade losing streak at different risk levels:
| Risk % | After 5 Losses | After 10 Losses | Gain Needed to Recover |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1% | $9,510 | $9,044 | 10.6% |
| 2% | $9,039 | $8,171 | 22.4% |
| 5% | $7,738 | $5,987 | 67.0% |
| 10% | $5,905 | $3,487 | 186.7% |
At 1% risk, even 10 consecutive losses only costs 9.6% of your account. At 10% risk, you've lost 65% and need to nearly triple your remaining balance to break even. That's the difference between a temporary setback and account destruction.
Practical Guideline
New traders: risk 0.5% per trade. Experienced traders: risk 1% per trade. Aggressive traders: up to 2% per trade, but never more. The 1% rule is not about timidity — it's about ensuring you're still trading next month.
Lot Size vs Position Size — Are They the Same?
In practice, "lot size" and "position size" refer to the same thing — the number of units you're trading. The difference is in how they're expressed:
| Term | Expression | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Lot Size | In lots (standard, mini, micro) | 0.20 standard lots |
| Position Size | In units of currency | 20,000 units |
| Position Value | In dollar terms | $20,000 notional |
This lot size calculator focuses on determining the optimal number of lots from your risk parameters. Our Position Size Calculator takes a different approach — starting from units and helping you determine risk.
Looking for the Position Size Calculator?
If you already know your risk parameters and want to calculate position size from a different angle, our Position Size Calculator complements this tool by focusing on units and position value rather than lot formatting.
Use this calculator when you think in lots. Use the Position Size Calculator when you think in units or dollar values.
Standard vs Mini vs Micro Lots Explained
| Lot Type | Units | Pip Value (EUR/USD) | $100 Risk / 50-Pip SL | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | 100,000 | $10.00/pip | 0.20 lots | Accounts $10,000+ |
| Mini | 10,000 | $1.00/pip | 2.0 lots | Accounts $2,000–$10,000 |
| Micro | 1,000 | $0.10/pip | 20 lots | Accounts under $2,000 |
| Nano | 100 | $0.01/pip | 200 lots | Testing & practice |
The same trade expressed in different lot types is identical in position size. 0.10 standard lots = 1.0 mini lots = 10 micro lots = 10,000 units. Choose the format your broker uses.
Watch Out for Broker Lot Conventions
Some brokers display lot size differently. On MetaTrader, "1.00" always means 1 standard lot (100,000 units). On cTrader, the default display may show units. Always verify what "1 lot" means on your specific platform before placing trades.
How Lot Size Affects Your Stop Loss Strategy
Lot size and stop loss are two sides of the same coin. For any fixed risk amount, changing one changes the other:
This means you should always set your stop loss based on market structure first, then calculate the lot size to match your risk. Never do it the other way around — choosing a lot size and then squeezing your stop loss to fit is a recipe for getting stopped out on noise.
Example: $10,000 Account, 1% Risk ($100) on EUR/USD
| Stop Loss | Lot Size | Units | Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 pips | 1.00 lots | 100,000 | Scalping (tight stop) |
| 25 pips | 0.40 lots | 40,000 | Day trading |
| 50 pips | 0.20 lots | 20,000 | Day/swing trading |
| 100 pips | 0.10 lots | 10,000 | Swing trading |
| 200 pips | 0.05 lots | 5,000 | Position trading |
The Correct Order
1. Find the trade setup. 2. Determine the logical stop loss level. 3. Use this calculator to find the lot size. 4. Verify the margin is sufficient. 5. Place the trade. Never adjust your stop loss to fit a predetermined lot size.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Lot size is the number of currency units in a trade, expressed in standardized lots. A standard lot is 100,000 units, a mini lot is 10,000 units, and a micro lot is 1,000 units. Your lot size directly determines how much you make or lose per pip of price movement.
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Lot Size = (Account Balance × Risk Percentage) ÷ (Stop Loss in Pips × Pip Value per Standard Lot). For example, with a $10,000 account risking 1% and a 50-pip stop loss on EUR/USD (pip value = $10): ($10,000 × 0.01) ÷ (50 × $10) = $100 ÷ $500 = 0.20 standard lots.
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The 1% rule means never risking more than 1% of your total account balance on a single trade. On a $10,000 account, your maximum loss per trade is $100. This ensures that even a streak of 10 losses only costs you about 9.6% of your account, leaving you with enough capital to recover.
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They describe the same thing in different units. Lot size uses standardized lots (0.20 lots), while position size usually refers to units (20,000) or dollar value ($20,000). 0.20 standard lots = 2.0 mini lots = 20 micro lots = 20,000 units. The terms are often used interchangeably.
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Beginners should start with micro lots (0.01 standard lots = 1,000 units). On EUR/USD, this means you risk only $0.10 per pip — so a 50-pip stop loss costs just $5. This lets you learn real trading psychology without significant financial risk. Increase lot size gradually as your skills and account grow.
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Stop loss and lot size are inversely related when risk is fixed. Double the stop loss distance and the lot size is halved. A 50-pip stop requires 0.20 lots for $100 risk on EUR/USD, while a 100-pip stop requires only 0.10 lots for the same $100 risk. Always set the stop loss first based on market structure, then calculate the lot size.
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For EUR/USD (where USD is the quote currency): 1 standard lot = $10/pip, 1 mini lot = $1/pip, 1 micro lot = $0.10/pip, 1 nano lot = $0.01/pip. For other pairs, pip value depends on the quote currency and your account currency conversion rate. Use our Pip Value Calculator for exact values.
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Yes. Most brokers support lot sizes down to 0.01 (1 micro lot = 1,000 units). Some brokers offer nano lots at 0.001 (100 units). This granularity lets you match your exact risk amount. If the calculator suggests 0.17 lots but your broker's minimum increment is 0.01, round down to 0.17 lots.
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Conservative: 0.5% per trade. Standard: 1% per trade. Aggressive: 2% per trade. The absolute maximum most risk management frameworks recommend is 5%, and only in exceptional high-conviction setups. Remember that risk compounds during losing streaks — even 2% risk means 18% drawdown after 10 consecutive losses.
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Yes, directly. Margin = (Lot Size × Contract Size) / Leverage. At 1:100 leverage, 0.20 lots of EUR/USD requires about $200 in margin (20,000 units / 100). At 1:30 (EU regulation), the same position requires about $667. Always check that your account has enough free margin before placing the trade.
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