Risk & money management
How much should I risk per trade?
The classic answer is 1–2% of account equity per trade, and it survives scrutiny: at 1% risk, a brutal streak of 10 straight losses costs about 10% of the account — recoverable; at 10% risk the same streak is a 65% hole that requires tripling your money to climb out of. Position size is what turns a losing streak from an annoyance into a funeral.
Risk-per-trade means distance to your stop, not position value: risking 1% with a stop 5% away means position size = 20% of equity. Our position-size calculator does this arithmetic, and backtests can enforce the rule automatically so the tested strategy and the traded one size identically.
The fastest answer is a test
Most 'does X work?' questions take a minute to answer empirically — on real data, with an out-of-sample check, free.
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Educational content, not financial advice. Backtested and historical figures describe past periods only; past performance does not guarantee future results.