The Complete Guide

Forex Position Sizing —
the maths, the strategy, the discipline

How to calculate your exact lot size, why 1% risk per trade survives where 5% blows up, and the three things that position sizing alone won't save you from.

~12 min read Updated May 2026 Free · No signup
In this guide
  1. What is position size?
  2. Why it matters more than your strategy
  3. The position size formula
  4. Pip value — the bit most people get wrong
  5. Worked examples for every major pair
  6. What % should you actually risk?
  7. Prop firm sizing — different rules apply
  8. 10 sizing mistakes that quietly kill accounts
  9. Why sizing alone won't save you
  10. Free tools to do this for you
  11. Frequently asked questions

1. What is position size?

Position size is the number of units (or lots) of a currency pair you buy or sell on a single trade. In forex, the standard contract sizes are:

Position size controls one thing: how much money you actually lose if your stop loss gets hit. It's the only variable in a trade you have full control over — you don't decide where the market goes, but you do decide how much it costs you when the market goes against you.

This is why position sizing is the foundation of risk management. Get this wrong by even a small amount and a normal losing streak — which every trader experiences — becomes a blown account. Get it right and you can survive long enough for your edge to play out.

2. Why position sizing matters more than your strategy

Here's the part of forex education most people skip past, then learn the hard way: the maths of consecutive losses is brutal at higher risk percentages. Losing streaks happen to every trader. Even profitable ones go through 7–10 losses in a row periodically. The question isn't "will it happen", but "will I still have an account when it does."

Below is what a 10-trade losing streak costs you at different per-trade risk levels:

Risk per trade After 10 consecutive losses Account remaining Outcome
0.5% −4.9% 95.1% Barely a scratch
1% −9.6% 90.4% Annoying, recoverable
2% −18.3% 81.7% Painful but functional
3% −26.3% 73.7% Mental damage starts
5% −40.1% 59.9% Revenge trade territory
10% −65.1% 34.9% Account effectively dead

And here's the asymmetry that destroys most accounts: the percentage you need to win back from a drawdown is always larger than the percentage you lost. Lose 50%, you need a 100% gain to break even. Lose 75%, you need 300%.

The UK's FCA, the EU's ESMA, and the US's CFTC all consistently report that 70–80% of retail forex traders lose money. Most of those traders don't fail because their analysis is wrong. They fail because one oversized trade undoes a month of disciplined wins, or a normal losing streak at 5% risk wipes out half the account before they can recover psychologically.

Position sizing is the single most important variable you control. Master this and you've eliminated the most common cause of account death. Everything else — strategy, timing, psychology — gets easier when you've removed the catastrophic-loss possibility.

3. The position size formula

The formula is straightforward in principle:

Lot size = Risk amount ÷ (Stop distance in pips × Pip value per lot in your account currency)

Three inputs, one output. Let's walk through what each means:

A quick example: you have a £10,000 GBP account. You want to risk 1% (£100). Your stop loss on EUR/USD is 20 pips away from your entry. With a GBP account, the pip value on EUR/USD is approximately £7.50 per standard lot.

Lot size = £100 ÷ (20 pips × £7.50)
Lot size = £100 ÷ £150
Lot size = 0.67 standard lots

That's the entire mechanic. The complication is that pip value isn't a constant — it changes with the pair, the quote currency, and your account currency. That's the bit that trips up almost every manual calculation.

4. Pip value — the bit most people get wrong

A "pip" is the standard unit of price movement in a forex pair. For most pairs, one pip = 0.0001 (the 4th decimal place). For JPY-quoted pairs (USD/JPY, EUR/JPY, etc.), one pip = 0.01 (the 2nd decimal place) because the yen has a much higher nominal value.

The pip value — how much money one pip is worth on a single lot — is what makes the maths messy. It depends on two things:

  1. The quote currency (the second currency in the pair). On EUR/USD, the quote is USD, so the pip value is initially calculated in USD.
  2. Your account currency. If your account is in USD and you trade EUR/USD, no conversion needed. If your account is in GBP and you trade EUR/USD, the USD pip value has to be converted back to GBP.

The base formula:

Pip value per lot (in quote ccy) = Pip size × Contract size
For EUR/USD: 0.0001 × 100,000 = $10 per pip per standard lot
For USD/JPY: 0.01 × 100,000 = ¥1,000 per pip per standard lot

Then convert to your account currency using the current cross rate. Here's a typical pip value table for a GBP account (these are approximations — exact values depend on live rates):

Pair Pip value per standard lot (GBP account) Why
EUR/USD~£7.50$10 ÷ GBP/USD rate
GBP/USD~£7.50$10 ÷ GBP/USD rate
USD/JPY~£6.50¥1,000 ÷ GBP/JPY rate
EUR/GBP£10.00GBP is the quote — no conversion needed
USD/CHF~£9.0010 CHF ÷ GBP/CHF rate
GBP/JPY~£6.50¥1,000 ÷ GBP/JPY rate

This is where most manual calculations go wrong. People assume £10/pip for everything (which is only true when the quote currency equals the account currency), then size a trade 30% larger than they should because they ignored the conversion.

Why this matters: if you assume £10/pip on every pair when your real pip value is £7.50, you're consistently risking 33% more than you intended. That turns a "1% risk" trade into a 1.33% risk trade. Compound that across 100 trades and you've materially changed your equity curve without realising it.

This is also why we built fxsizecalc.com — it handles every pair / account currency / broker combination automatically using live FX rates, so the maths is always exact regardless of which pair you're trading from which account.

5. Worked examples for every major pair

Four scenarios covering the most common combinations. Each uses a £10,000 GBP account and 1% risk (£100) with a 25-pip stop loss.

Example 1 — same-currency case

USD account, EUR/USD

Account currencyUSD
Pair quote currencyUSD
Pip value per lot$10.00
Risk amount$100
Stop distance25 pips
Calculation$100 ÷ (25 × $10)
Lot size: 0.40 standard lots
Example 2 — cross-currency case

GBP account, EUR/USD

Account currencyGBP
Pair quote currencyUSD
Pip value per lot (in USD)$10.00
GBP/USD rate (illustrative)1.27
Pip value per lot (in GBP)$10 ÷ 1.27 = £7.87
Risk amount£100
Calculation£100 ÷ (25 × £7.87)
Lot size: 0.51 standard lots
Example 3 — JPY pair

USD account, USD/JPY

Account currencyUSD
Pair quote currencyJPY
Pip size0.01 (JPY pairs are different)
Pip value per lot (in JPY)¥1,000
USD/JPY rate (illustrative)150
Pip value per lot (in USD)¥1,000 ÷ 150 = $6.67
Calculation$100 ÷ (25 × $6.67)
Lot size: 0.60 standard lots
Example 4 — full conversion

GBP account, GBP/JPY (base currency is GBP, JPY quote)

Account currencyGBP
Pair quote currencyJPY
Pip value per lot (in JPY)¥1,000
GBP/JPY rate (illustrative)190
Pip value per lot (in GBP)¥1,000 ÷ 190 = £5.26
Calculation£100 ÷ (25 × £5.26)
Lot size: 0.76 standard lots

Notice how the same £100 risk on the same 25-pip stop produces wildly different lot sizes — anywhere from 0.40 to 0.76 — depending on the pair and account currency combination. This is exactly why eyeballing position sizes doesn't work.

6. What % should you actually risk per trade?

The industry consensus is 0.5% to 2% per trade. Most professional traders sit at the lower end of that range. Here's why:

At 1% per trade, even a 20-trade losing streak (which is statistically rare but happens) leaves you with about 82% of your account. You can come back from that mentally and financially. Whatever your strategy's edge is, it has room to work itself out across hundreds of trades.

At 5% per trade, the same 20-trade streak puts you down 64%. From that hole, you'd need to triple your remaining capital just to get back to breakeven. Most traders psychologically can't make rational decisions in that state — they revenge trade, abandon their system, or quit entirely.

"If you can't survive a 10-trade losing streak with your current sizing, your sizing is too aggressive — full stop."

Beginners often want to risk more per trade because their accounts are small and the dollar amounts feel insignificant. This is backwards. Beginners are more likely to hit longer losing streaks because their strategy isn't dialled in yet. They need more protection, not less.

If your account is £500 and 1% per trade feels too small (£5 per trade), the answer isn't to risk more — it's to acknowledge that you're in a deliberate learning phase, focus on process not profit, and only scale up the absolute dollar amounts as your account grows.

A practical recommendation:

7. Prop firm sizing — different rules apply

If you're trading a funded account from a prop firm (FTMO, FundedNext, FundingPips, The5%ers, etc.), the standard 1–2% per trade rule still applies — but you also have to respect the firm's daily drawdown limit and maximum overall drawdown.

Most prop firms cap daily losses at 5% of the starting balance. Some (notably FundingPips on certain programs) cap daily losses at 3%. Breach the daily limit even once and the account is terminated regardless of overall performance.

The rule that protects you: risk no more than 1/5th of your daily limit per trade. On a 5% daily limit, that's 1% per trade. You can take 4 losing trades in a row before you're staring at the daily limit — that buffer is what keeps you in the game during a bad day.

The trap that catches most prop firm traders:

  1. You take a normal-sized trade (1% risk = $1,000 on a $100k FTMO account). It loses.
  2. Frustrated, you take a "make it back" trade at 2% ($2,000). It also loses.
  3. You're now $3,000 down. The 5% daily limit is $5,000. One more losing 2% trade and you're done.
  4. Most traders take that one more trade anyway. Account terminated.

The fix is mechanical: pick a per-trade risk that gives you at least 4 losses of buffer against the daily limit, and stop trading for the day after 2 losses no matter what.

For prop firm accounts specifically, the calculator at fxsizecalc.com/prop-firm-calculator.html has presets for each major firm and shows you exactly how much drawdown headroom you have for the planned trade — green if safe, orange if you're getting close, red if a single trade would breach the limit.

8. Ten sizing mistakes that quietly kill accounts

These are the patterns that crop up over and over in losing accounts. Most traders make several of them simultaneously.

  1. Eyeballing the lot size. "0.5 lots feels about right" — no, it doesn't. Either calculate it or use a calculator.
  2. Using the same lot size for every pair. A 1-lot trade on EUR/USD risks ~$10/pip. The same 1 lot on GBP/JPY risks ~$13/pip. Different beast.
  3. Forgetting account currency conversion. Assuming £10/pip when your real pip value is £7.50 means you're risking 33% more than planned.
  4. Sizing without a stop loss. If you don't have a stop, your "risk per trade" is the entire account. There is no position size that's safe in that scenario.
  5. Increasing size after losses (revenge sizing). "I need to make it back." The maths of recovery is harder than the maths of grinding back patiently. Don't.
  6. Increasing size dramatically after wins. A 50% increase after a winning streak feels conservative. It's not — you've just shifted from 1% to 1.5% risk for trades that are statistically just as likely to lose as any other.
  7. Confusing "per pip" with "per trade". Risking £10/pip on a 50-pip stop is £500 risk, not £10. Lots of new traders conflate these.
  8. Not accounting for commissions and spread. A 20-pip stop with a 2-pip spread and £5 commission per lot is genuinely a 22.5-pip cost. Your real risk per trade is higher than the stop-only calculation.
  9. Sizing based on the price chart, not the account. "EUR/USD is at 1.10 and I want to buy 1 lot" is meaningless without knowing your stop and your account size.
  10. Trading correlated positions as if they're independent. Long EUR/USD + long GBP/USD + short USD/CHF is effectively one trade — short USD — with 3x the position size. Each one might be 1% risk individually, but the combined exposure is 3% on USD direction.

9. Why position sizing alone won't save you

Everything above this section is about controlling the magnitude of losses. Perfect sizing solves one problem brilliantly: when a trade goes wrong, the damage is bounded.

What sizing doesn't solve is the frequency of losses — and frequency is determined by what trades you actually take. You can have perfect 1% sizing and still grind your account down to zero if your trade selection is poor. The three biggest filters that separate consistent traders from gamblers, in plain English:

9.1 — Trade with the trend, not against it

Markets have direction. On higher timeframes, that direction is more reliable than on lower ones. A 5-minute chart might look bearish for an hour while the daily is in a clear uptrend — and the daily will usually win.

The mechanism most consistent traders use is multi-timeframe (MTF) analysis: before taking an entry on your execution timeframe (say the 1-hour chart), confirm the trend on a higher timeframe (the 4-hour or daily). If they disagree, the higher timeframe wins — either skip the trade or wait for the lower-timeframe trend to realign.

A simple practical rule: if the daily chart is making higher highs and higher lows, only take long setups on your lower timeframes. Skip every short setup, no matter how clean it looks. The number of losing trades you'll avoid this way is hard to overstate.

Counter-trend trading isn't impossible, but it requires substantially more skill, tighter management, and a higher win rate to be profitable. Beginners almost universally do better by giving themselves the harder discipline (waiting for trend alignment) and the easier trades (with-trend setups).

9.2 — Enter from the right place, not random levels

Where you enter a trade matters more than most beginners realise. A long entered randomly mid-range has a roughly 50/50 chance of being profitable. A long entered at a clear support level — where buyers have repeatedly defended the price before — has a measurably better edge.

The two highest-probability entry zones in any market are support (for longs) and resistance (for shorts). The reason is structural: institutional orders cluster at these levels. When price arrives, there's real buying or selling fuel waiting — not just retail noise.

The practical workflow is to mark your key levels on higher timeframes before the session starts. Watch price. When it arrives at one of your pre-marked levels, you have a setup worth considering. When price is in the middle of a range with no nearby level, you have nothing worth trading — even if the candles look exciting.

This is the discipline that turns trading from "watching screens looking for action" into "waiting for the market to come to your levels." It's boring, which is exactly why most people don't do it.

9.3 — Wait for the entry signal — let the market tell you

Even at a high-quality support or resistance level, blindly hitting the buy button is gambling. The market regularly breaks through levels with no respect for them at all. The difference between a 50% win rate and a 65% win rate at the same level is whether you wait for the market to confirm the level held before you enter.

Confirmation comes from candlestick patterns at the level — the price action's way of telling you that the level is being respected. The patterns to know:

The pattern isn't magic — it's a snapshot of who's winning the fight at that level. When the pattern prints, the market is telling you the level held. That's your green light. When the level breaks without forming a pattern, the market is telling you it didn't hold. That's your skip.

The complete picture

Position sizing tells you how much to risk. Trend alignment, level selection, and entry confirmation together tell you which trades to take at all. They're not optional add-ons to sizing — they're the other half of the equation.

Combine these three with disciplined position sizing — confirm the trend, identify the level, wait for the signal, size to risk only what you intend — and you're operating with the same checklist that consistently profitable traders use.

That's not a hack or a secret system. It's the boring, repeatable framework that separates the 5–10% of traders who make it work from the 90% who don't. Understanding and applying it puts you mathematically and operationally ahead of almost every new trader entering the market today.

The position sizing part — the maths, the conversions, the lot calculations — is the easiest piece to outsource to a tool. The framework above is the part you have to internalise yourself.

10. Free tools to do the sizing for you

The maths is mechanical. There's no reason to do it by hand for every trade. Three free tools that handle it for you:

Skip the maths — use the calculator

All three tools are free, no signup, no email required. Built specifically to remove the manual calculation step from every trade.

11. Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a lot, a mini lot, and a micro lot?

Three sizing units used in forex. 1 standard lot = 100,000 units of the base currency. 1 mini lot = 10,000 units (0.1 standard lots). 1 micro lot = 1,000 units (0.01 standard lots). Most retail brokers let you trade in any of these sizes, often with finer granularity (e.g. 0.03 lots). Pip values scale proportionally — if a standard lot is worth $10/pip, a mini lot is $1/pip and a micro lot is $0.10/pip.

How do I calculate position size without a calculator?

The formula is Lot size = Risk amount ÷ (Stop pips × Pip value per lot in account currency). The friction-point is the pip value — for pairs where your account currency matches the quote currency it's a clean $10 per pip per standard lot. For all other combinations you need the live cross rate to convert. You can do it manually if you have a calculator handy and know the current cross rate, but it's slow and error-prone, which is why most traders use a calculator tool for every trade.

How much should I risk per trade as a beginner?

0.5% per trade until you have at least 100 trades of data showing a measurable edge. After that, 1% is the standard for traders with verified profitability. Going above 2% is statistically aggressive even for experienced traders. The maths is brutal at high risk percentages — a 10-trade losing streak at 5% risk loses you 40%+ of your account, which most traders can't psychologically recover from.

Why does pip value change between pairs?

Pip value depends on the quote currency (the second currency in the pair) and on your account currency. EUR/USD's pip value is initially in USD; USD/JPY's is initially in JPY. If your account is in GBP, every pip value has to be converted back to GBP using the live cross rate. This conversion changes the pip value for each pair, which is why the same nominal lot size results in different £-per-pip exposure depending on what you're trading.

Does account currency affect lot size?

Yes, materially. The same trade with the same stop loss and the same risk percentage produces different lot sizes depending on your account currency. A £10,000 GBP account taking a 25-pip-stop trade on EUR/USD at 1% risk will use a different lot size than a $10,000 USD account taking the same trade, because the conversion path from USD pip value to account currency differs. Calculators that don't handle this conversion correctly silently mis-size positions for non-USD account holders.

How is position size different for JPY pairs?

JPY pairs use a different pip size. For most pairs, 1 pip = 0.0001 (the 4th decimal). For JPY pairs, 1 pip = 0.01 (the 2nd decimal), because the yen has a much higher nominal value than other currencies. The contract size is still 100,000 units per standard lot, so pip value in JPY = 0.01 × 100,000 = ¥1,000 per pip per standard lot. You then convert that JPY amount to your account currency using the relevant cross rate.

What's the maximum losing streak I should plan for?

Plan for at least 10 consecutive losses, ideally more. Even profitable traders with 55–60% win rates routinely hit streaks of 7–10 losses in a row — it's just normal sampling variance, not a sign that anything's wrong. Your position sizing should leave you both financially and psychologically intact after such a streak. If 10 losses in a row would drop you below 80% of your account, your sizing is too aggressive.

Should I increase position size when I'm on a winning streak?

Cautiously, and only at planned intervals. Your edge is statistical — a 60% win rate means individual trade outcomes are still essentially random. Increasing size after wins because you "feel hot" is the same psychological trap as increasing size after losses because you want to "make it back" — both let emotion override the system. Some experienced traders compound by re-calculating their 1% based on current equity (so risk grows naturally as the account grows), which is more disciplined than ad-hoc increases.

Should I decrease position size when I'm losing?

This is debated. The case for: it reduces drawdown damage during bad periods. The case against: it makes recovery slower because you're sized smaller when conditions improve. Most professional approaches keep position size constant at a fixed % of current equity — that way the size automatically scales down as the account drawdowns (1% of £8,000 is less than 1% of £10,000) without any discretionary adjustments needed.

How do prop firms calculate drawdown vs my actual P&L?

Prop firms calculate drawdown on equity, not just realised P&L. This includes realised losses, unrealised losses on open positions, commissions, and overnight swap fees. A trade that's down £200 unrealised counts toward your drawdown immediately, not just when you close it. This is why holding losing positions overnight is dangerous — the swap can quietly push you over the daily limit while you sleep. Most firms also use trailing drawdown for funded accounts, where the max-drawdown floor moves up as your account grows.

Can I use the same position size for scalping and swing trading?

Same risk percentage, different lot size. The 1% rule is about risk per trade, not lot size. A scalp with a 5-pip stop and a swing trade with a 100-pip stop should both risk the same dollar amount of your account, which means the lot size on the scalp will be ~20x larger than the swing trade. The calculator handles this automatically — you set the risk %, the stop distance dictates the rest.

What's the difference between stop loss in pips and price?

They're two ways of expressing the same thing. Stop loss in pips = the distance from entry to stop, measured in pips (e.g. "20-pip stop"). Stop loss as a price = the actual price level (e.g. "stop at 1.0980 from an entry at 1.1000"). The calculator on this site accepts either input — you can set the stop as a price level if you have a specific technical level in mind, or as a pip distance if you're using a fixed-stop strategy.

Does leverage affect my position size?

Not directly. Leverage determines the maximum lot size your account can hold open at once — it limits your margin, not your risk per trade. A 1% risk on a 25-pip stop produces the same lot size whether your broker offers 1:30 or 1:500 leverage. What leverage does change is how easy it is to over-size — high-leverage brokers let you accidentally place trades that would risk 10%+ of your account because the margin requirement is so low. Stick to risk-based sizing regardless of available leverage.

Can correct position sizing make a losing strategy profitable?

No. Position sizing is risk management, not edge generation. If your strategy has a negative expected value (you lose more on average than you make), perfect sizing only makes you lose money more slowly — it doesn't turn losses into profits. The right order of operations is: prove your strategy is profitable on paper first, then layer disciplined sizing on top to maximise survival. Sizing without a real edge is just careful gambling.

Why do most retail forex traders lose money?

Regulators in the UK (FCA), EU (ESMA), and US (CFTC) consistently report 70–80% of retail forex traders lose money over any given period. The root causes are well-documented and usually combine: position sizes too large for the stop loss (the primary killer), trading without a defined edge, holding losers and cutting winners early (the disposition effect), overtrading driven by boredom or excitement, and chasing losses with revenge trades. The traders who succeed tend to share opposite habits — small risk per trade, statistical edges they've measured, mechanical entry and exit rules, and the patience to sit out periods when conditions don't favour them.

Sources and further reading