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Free Trading Tool

Crypto Position Size Calculator

Calculate the exact number of units to buy or sell — based on your risk tolerance, stop-loss, leverage, and real exchange fees. Never risk more than you can afford per trade.

Inputs
Exchange Auto-fills fees
Account Balance Total capital
$
Risk Per Trade
2.00%
Direction
Asset / Ticker e.g. BTC, ETH, DOGE
Entry Price
$
Stop-Loss Exit if wrong
$
Take-Profit Optional
$
Leverage 1x = spot, max 125x
×
Fees Maker / Taker
%
/
%
Results
Position Size
0.066667 BTC
$4,333.33
Amount at Risk
$200.00
Net Loss (if stopped)
$203.03
Risk : Reward
1 : 2.33
Potential Profit
$466.67
Net Profit (after fees)
$463.63
Total Fees (round-trip)
$3.03 (0.07%)
Break-Even Price
$65,045.50
Stop Distance
4.62%
Margin Required
$433.33
Effective Leverage
0.43x
Max Position %
43.33%
Liquidation Price
$58,890.00
Win Rate Break-Even
30.00%
Funding (8h / Day / Week)
$0.4333 / $1.30 / $9.10
Risk LevelModerate
SafeModerateAggressiveDanger
Liquidation SafetySafe
SL
LIQ
Your stop triggers well before liquidation. Good setup.
Drawdown Simulator
What happens after consecutive losses at 2.00% risk:
LossesBalanceDrawdownTo Recover
5$9,039.219.61%10.63%
10$8,170.7318.29%22.39%
15$7,385.6926.14%35.40%
20$6,676.0833.24%49.79%
25$6,034.6539.65%65.71%
30$5,454.8445.45%83.32%

What Is Position Sizing in Crypto?

Position sizing determines how many units of a cryptocurrency to buy or sell per trade. It is the single most important risk management technique because it controls your maximum loss when a trade goes wrong.

Without it, even a 70% win-rate strategy can blow up an account. One oversized loss wipes out dozens of wins. Professional traders rank position sizing above entry signals, chart patterns, and market timing.

Unlike traditional markets, crypto trades 24/7 with extreme volatility. A properly sized position means a flash crash at 3 AM hits your stop-loss and costs 1-2% of your account — not 50%. This calculator factors in real exchange fees (maker/taker), leverage, and liquidation risk that generic forex calculators ignore.

Core principle: Decide how much you can lose before deciding how much to buy. This calculator automates that — including exchange fees — in seconds.

The Position Size Formula

Three variables drive the calculation: account balance, risk tolerance (%), and the distance between entry and stop-loss.

Position Size = (Account Balance × Risk %) ÷ |Entry − Stop-Loss|
Returns units (e.g., BTC). Multiply by entry price for dollar value.

Fee-Adjusted Net Profit Formula

Most calculators ignore fees. On a leveraged crypto trade, round-trip fees of 0.07% can represent 7% of your margin at 100x. This matters.

Net Profit = (Position Size × |TP − Entry|) − (Position × (Maker% + Taker%))
Break-Even Price = Entry ± (Entry × (Maker% + Taker%))

For leveraged trades, margin is one more step:

Margin Required = (Position Size × Entry Price) ÷ Leverage
Leverage reduces margin needed — it does NOT reduce the dollar risk.

Worked Example: Sizing a Bitcoin Trade on Binance

Example — Long BTC at 10x on Binance Futures

Account: $10,000 · Risk: 2% = $200

Entry: $65,000 · Stop: $62,000 (4.62% below)

Position Size: $200 ÷ $3,000 = 0.0667 BTC ≈ $4,333

Binance Fees: Maker 0.02% + Taker 0.05% = $3.03 round-trip

Margin at 10x: $433 locked

Take-Profit at $72,000: Gross profit $466 — Fees $3.03 = Net $463

Risk:Reward = 1 : 2.33 · Win Rate Break-Even: 30%

How to Use This Calculator

1

Select your exchange

Pick Binance, Bybit, OKX, Bitget, or dYdX. Fees auto-fill.

2

Enter account balance

Total trading capital in USD — not your net worth.

3

Set risk percentage

Drag the slider. Professional standard: 1–2%.

4

Choose direction & prices

Long or Short, entry, stop-loss, and optional take-profit.

5

Set leverage

1× for spot. For futures, enter leverage to see margin and liquidation price.

6

Read results instantly

Position size, fees, net profit, margin, liquidation, drawdown — all real-time.

How Much Should You Risk Per Trade?

Risk Level%/TradeBest ForSurvive StreakDrawdown at 20 Losses
Ultra-Conservative0.25–0.5%Scalpers, large accounts200+ losses4.9–9.5%
Conservative0.5–1%Swing traders, beginners100+ losses9.5–18.2%
Moderate1–2%Most traders50+ losses18.2–33.2%
Aggressive2–3%Experienced, proven edge30+ losses33.2–45.6%
Very Aggressive3–5%Small accounts only15–20 losses45.6–64.2%

Pro Tip: At 2% you survive 34 consecutive losses and keep 50%+ of your account. At 5%, only 13 losses drops you below half. Use the drawdown simulator above to see this for yourself.

Exchange Fee Comparison (2026)

Fees vary dramatically between exchanges. On a $10,000 position, the difference between exchanges can be $3 vs $12 per round-trip. Over 100 trades, that's $900 saved.

ExchangeMaker FeeTaker FeeMax LeverageCost on $10K
Binance0.02%0.05%125x$7.00
Bybit0.02%0.055%100x$7.50
OKX0.02%0.05%100x$7.00
Bitget0.02%0.06%125x$8.00
dYdX0.02%0.05%20x$7.00

Always use limit orders (maker) when possible — they're 60% cheaper than market orders (taker) on most exchanges.

How Leverage Affects Position Sizing

Leverage only changes margin, not risk. A $4,333 position at 1× needs $4,333 margin. At 10× it needs $433. Both lose exactly $200 if the stop triggers.

Isolated vs Cross Margin

Isolated margin limits your loss to the margin assigned to that specific trade. If you put $433 in margin for BTC, that's the most you can lose even if liquidated — your other funds stay safe.

Cross margin uses your entire account balance as margin. One bad trade can drain everything. Always use isolated margin for proper position sizing.

Funding Rates

Perpetual futures charge funding rates every 8 hours (typically 0.01%). On a $10,000 leveraged position held for a week, that's $21 in funding fees. Factor this into swing trades lasting more than a day.

Liquidation Warning: At 100× leverage on a long, a 1% price drop liquidates you. The Liquidation Safety Gauge above shows exactly how close your stop is to being liquidated.

Understanding Drawdown & Risk of Ruin

Drawdown is the peak-to-trough decline in your account. Every trader experiences drawdowns — the question is whether your account survives them.

The Math of Recovery

DrawdownGain to RecoverDifficulty
10%11.1%Easy — normal trading
20%25%Manageable
30%42.9%Hard
50%100%Very hard — most traders quit
75%300%Nearly impossible

This is why keeping risk at 1-2% is so critical. At 2% risk, after 20 consecutive losses you're down 33% and need 50% to recover. At 5% risk, you're down 64% and need 178% to recover.

Monte Carlo insight: Even a strategy with 55% win rate and 2:1 R:R has a ~5% chance of hitting 10 consecutive losses. That's normal variance, not a broken strategy.

Position Sizing for Memecoins & Low-Cap Tokens

Memecoins (DOGE, SHIB, PEPE, WIF) require special sizing considerations:

Higher Volatility = Wider Stops

Memecoins routinely move 10-30% in a day. A 2% stop-loss will get triggered by noise. Use wider stops (5-10%) and let the formula automatically give you a smaller position size.

Liquidity Risk

Low-cap tokens have thin order books. A $50K market sell can move the price 5%. Keep positions under 1% of daily volume to avoid slippage.

Recommended Sizing for Memecoins

Rule of thumb: Use 0.5-1% risk on memecoins instead of the standard 2%. Never use leverage on low-liquidity tokens.

6 Mistakes That Blow Up Accounts

1. Sizing by "feel"

Traders bet bigger when confident, smaller when scared — opposite of correct risk management. Use the calculator every time.

2. Increasing size after wins

Overconfidence from winning streaks leads to giving back all profits in one loss.

3. Ignoring fees & slippage

At 100x leverage, a 0.07% round-trip fee eats 7% of your margin. This calculator shows fees broken out so you see the real cost.

4. Using leverage to trade bigger

Leverage should reduce margin, not increase position sizes. Size by risk first, then apply leverage.

5. Moving stop-losses wider

Widening stops after entry breaks your math. Accept the loss or reduce size before entry.

6. Ignoring the maker/taker difference

Limit orders (maker) cost 60% less than market orders (taker). On 100 trades at $10K position size, that saves $300-500.

Advanced: The Kelly Criterion

Kelly % = Win Rate − [(1 − Win Rate) ÷ R:R Ratio]
Most traders use ¼ to ½ of full Kelly to reduce variance.

Example: 55% win rate with 2:1 R:R = 0.55 − (0.45 ÷ 2) = 32.5%. Half-Kelly = 16.25%. Requires 200+ logged trades. Without data, stick to fixed 1-2%.

Position Sizing on Each Exchange

Binance Futures

Select "Binance" in the exchange dropdown. Set isolated margin. Enter your subaccount balance (not total Binance balance). Copy the position size value to the order form. Binance supports up to 125x leverage on BTC, but we recommend 5-20x maximum.

Bybit

Select "Bybit" in the dropdown. Bybit's unified trading account uses cross margin by default — switch to isolated for each position. Fees are slightly higher than Binance (0.055% taker).

OKX

Select "OKX". OKX supports portfolio margin mode which can reduce margin requirements. Fees match Binance. Copy the calculated units directly into the order quantity field.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best risk percentage for beginners?

Start with 1%. This gives room to learn without devastating your account. After 100+ trades with a proven strategy, consider 2%.

How do exchange fees affect position sizing?

Fees reduce net profit and create a break-even price. On a $4,333 BTC position at Binance, round-trip fees are $3.03. At 100x leverage, fees alone eat 7% of your margin. This calculator shows total fees, net profit after fees, and the exact break-even price.

Does this work for stocks and forex?

Yes. The formula is universal. Enter any asset's prices and it works identically. Set fees to your broker's commission rate.

How accurate is the liquidation price?

It is an estimate for isolated margin with 0.6% maintenance margin. Actual prices vary by exchange and position size. The Liquidation Safety Gauge shows whether your stop triggers before liquidation.

Should I use the same risk % every trade?

Yes. Consistency prevents outsized damage. Some scale 1–2% by conviction, but keep variance small.

What is the win-rate break-even?

The minimum percentage of trades you must win to not lose money, given your risk:reward ratio. At 1:2 R:R, you only need to win 33% of trades to break even. At 1:1, you need 50%.

Isolated vs cross margin — which should I use?

Isolated limits loss to that trade's margin. Cross uses your full balance and can drain your account in one bad trade. Always use isolated for proper position sizing.

How do I size positions for memecoins?

Use 0.5-1% risk instead of 2%, wider stops (5-10%), and never use leverage on low-liquidity tokens. Memecoins have extreme volatility that triggers tight stops constantly.

What is the 2% rule?

Never risk more than 2% of your trading account on any single trade. On a $10,000 account, that means max $200 loss per trade. This rule lets you survive 34 consecutive losses and keep 50%+ of your capital.

Is position sizing the same as lot size?

Yes, in forex terminology. Position sizing gives you the number of units to trade; lot size is how forex brokers express that (1 standard lot = 100,000 units). In crypto, position size is expressed in coins (BTC, ETH) or dollar value.

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