Lot Size Calculator

How do you choose your trade size? Before entering any position, professional traders use a lot size calculator to set the exact volume based on risk, margin, and account leverage.

Calculation Results:

Amount at Risk

$ 0.00

Position Size (Units)

0

Sizing Lots

0.00

What is the Lot Size Calculator
and what is it used for?

In leveraged trading, “lot” is the unit used to measure trade volume. If you choose a position size that is larger than your allowed size, a small price move can wipe out your account balance.

The Lot Size Calculator determines your risk by receiving the following inputs:

In other words, based on the risk you accept, this tool shows you the maximum lot size you can enter for a trade.

Suitable for:

What does “lot” mean in Forex?

In CFD trading, a lot serves as the standard unit for measuring trade volume and is distinct from the contract size. In the context of major currency pairs, where either the base or quote currency is the US dollar, one lot typically represents 100,000 units of the base currency. The number 100,000 means that if you enter a buy trade with 1 lot, you have bought 100,000 units of the base currency; and if you enter a sell trade with 1 lot, you have bought 100,000 units of the quote currency. The larger the lot size, the larger the profit or loss per pip movement. That is why accurately and scientifically calculating the allowed lot size before entering a trade is essential.

How to use the Lot Size Calculator

Using the Aron Groups’ lot size calculator is simple:

Step 1

Enter the base currency and the requested currency pair

Enter your account balance..

Step 2

Set the risk percentage per trade

Specify how much of your account balance you risk in each trade.

Step 3

Enter the stop loss

Enter the stop-loss distance from the entry point in pips (in Forex) or in price (in gold and cryptocurrencies).

Step 4

Select the trading symbol

Choose the trading symbol (for example, EURUSD, XAUUSD, BTCUSD) and the account leverage so that the required margin and contract structure are applied correctly.

Step 5

Calculate the lot size

With one click, the calculator shows the suggested volume required to enter the trade. Note that the suggested volume is calculated only based on your input risk and is not considered a trading recommendation.

How to calculate the right lot size

In leveraged trading, “lot” is the unit used to measure trade volume. If you choose a position size that is larger than your allowed size, a small price move can wipe out your account balance.

The Lot Size Calculator determines your risk by receiving the following inputs:

Example:

Assume your account balance is $1,000 and you want to risk a maximum of $10 per trade (1% of capital).
Your trading symbol is gold (XAUUSD), and you set a 20-pip stop loss. The value of each pip with 1 lot of gold in Aron Groups broker is $0.01; therefore, the potential loss of 1 lot if the stop loss is hit equals $20.
((20 pips (equivalent to $0.2) * 1 lot * contract size 100))
To make sure your loss does not exceed $10, the trade volume must be reduced:
$10 (maximum allowed risk) ÷ $20 (loss on 1 lot) = 0.5 lot

How many dollars is 1 lot?

It is better to say: how much profit or loss does 1 lot create?

The answer depends on the contract size of the trading symbol.
In EUR/USD, the contract size is usually 100,000 units.
Therefore, when you trade 1 standard lot, each pip is approximately $1.
But in gold (XAUUSD), the contract size is usually 100 ounces.
That is why, with 1 standard lot of gold, the pip value is about $1.

The Lot Size Calculator determines your risk by receiving the following inputs:

 Types of lots

To manage risk better, understanding different lot types is essential:

Standard lot

One standard lot in major Forex symbols is usually equal to 100,000 units of the base currency. For example, if you trade gold with 1 lot, each 1-dollar movement in gold creates $100 profit or loss for you.

Nano lot

It equals 0.01 of a standard lot; meaning you usually buy 1,000 units of the base currency. For example, in gold, with 0.01 standard lot volume, each $1 price movement gives you $1 profit or loss.

How do Forex calculators help traders?

By using Forex calculators, money management is more accurate, emotional decisions are reduced, and the process of entering and exiting trades is fully calculated.

For example, with the Lot Size Calculator, you can:

If your goal is to build a sustainable trading system, choosing the right volume and managing risk logically and calculatedly is essential.

Final step: Enter the trade

Now that you have calculated your appropriate trade size,
you can enter the trade with more confidence based on these calculations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a lot in Forex?

A lot is the unit used to measure trade volume and shows the nominal value of your CFD contract.

Because trade volume directly affects your profit and loss, calculating risk per trade enables effective money management.

It is suitable for trading all Aron Groups’ symbols; these markets include Forex, indices, commodities, cryptocurrencies, and even local symbols.

Yes. Beginner traders can use it to calculate the appropriate volume for each trade accurately and prevent unexpected losses.

Calculations are based on balance, the selected symbol’s contract size, allowed leverage, and risk percentage per trade. If you set the risk too high, the lot size calculator will show a larger lot size.

The proper lot size is calculated based on your account balance, desired risk percentage, and stop-loss distance. If you choose a larger volume than the suggested amount, your risk becomes higher than the allowed level, and potential losses can quickly impact a large part of your capital.
On the other hand, if your volume is smaller than the proper lot size, risk is controlled but the potential profit is also reduced.
The important point is that a large lot size does not always mean high risk; in some strategies, the stop loss is only 1 pip or a few dollars, so a large volume can still remain within a logical risk range.
Just keep your risk per trade within the desired range of 1% to 3%, and if you experience consecutive losses, stop trading that day to protect your capital.

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