Profit/Loss Calculator

Estimate your potential profit or loss before entering a trade.

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How to Calculate Profit and Loss in Forex

Calculating potential profit and loss before entering a trade is a fundamental practice for disciplined forex traders. By knowing your expected P/L at different price levels, you can set realistic take-profit targets, appropriate stop-loss levels, and ensure your risk-to-reward ratio meets your trading plan criteria.

The basic P/L formula for a buy (long) trade is: Profit/Loss = (Exit Price - Entry Price) x Position Size x Contract Size. For a sell (short) trade, simply reverse the price difference: Profit/Loss = (Entry Price - Exit Price) x Position Size x Contract Size. The result is initially in the quote currency of the pair and may need conversion to your account currency.

Understanding P/L for Different Pair Types

For pairs where USD is the quote currency (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, AUD/USD, NZD/USD), the P/L calculation is straightforward since the result is already in US dollars. For example, buying 1 lot of EUR/USD at 1.0800 and selling at 1.0850 yields: (1.0850 - 1.0800) x 1 x 100,000 = $500 profit, which equals 50 pips.

For pairs where USD is the base currency (USD/JPY, USD/CAD, USD/CHF), the P/L is calculated in the quote currency first, then converted to USD by dividing by the exit price. For cross pairs like EUR/GBP, the P/L in the quote currency must be converted to USD using the appropriate exchange rate.

Practical Tips for P/L Management

Always calculate your potential loss before considering potential profit. This ensures you never enter a trade where the downside exceeds your risk tolerance. Many successful traders maintain a minimum risk-to-reward ratio of 1:2, meaning their target profit is at least twice their potential loss.

Remember that spreads, commissions, and swap fees also affect your actual P/L. Our calculator shows the gross profit or loss based on price movement alone. For a complete picture, factor in your broker's spread (typically 0.1-3 pips depending on the pair) and any overnight holding costs if you plan to keep positions open for multiple days.