Risk-to-Reward Ratio
What is Risk-to-Reward Ratio in Trading?
The risk-to-reward ratio (sometimes called the reward-to-risk ratio) is a way to compare how much money you could lose in a trade versus how much you could gain. It helps traders decide if a trade is worth taking.
In simple terms, it answers this question: “How many Dollars am I risking to make a possible profit?”
Example of Risk-to-Reward Ratio
Suppose you buy EURUSD at 1.10201:
- You set a stop-loss at 1.10101 (risking 10 pips).
- You set a take-profit at 1.10401 (aiming for 20 pips).
This means you are risking 10 pips to potentially make 20 pips.
- Your Risk-to-Reward ratio is 1:2 (risking 1 to earn 2).
Risk-to-Reward Ratio Formula
The basic risk-to-reward ratio formula is:
Risk-to-Reward Ratio = Potential Loss ÷ Potential Profit
Or simply, compare the size of your stop-loss to your profit target.
What is a Good Risk-to-Reward Ratio?
There is no single perfect answer, but many traders consider 1:2 or 1:3 a good ratio. This means for every 1 Dollar risked, they aim to make 2 or 3 Dollars in return.
Even if not all trades win, using a positive ratio with a high enough success rate helps traders stay profitable over the long run and manage risk.
How to Measure Risk-to-Reward
- Risk-to-Reward Ratio Calculator: Helps traders quickly see if their trade setup is worth it.
- Risk-to-Reward Ratio Chart: Shows visually how much risk vs reward is planned before entering a trade.
Other Glossary Terms
R
- Risk Management
Risk management in trading means using rules and tools to limit losses, protect your capital, and ensure one bad trade doesn’t wipe out your account while aiming for steady gains.
- Raw Spread
A raw spread is the true market difference between bid and ask prices, shown without broker markups, offering the lowest spreads but with a small commission per trade.
- Resistance Level
A resistance level is a price point where upward movement often stalls, acting like a ceiling that prevents the market from rising further until strong buying breaks through.
- Retail Trader
A retail trader is an individual who trades financial markets with personal funds through online platforms, unlike institutions that trade large capital for clients or organizations.
- Range Trading
Range trading is a strategy where traders buy near support and sell near resistance, aiming to profit from price movements within a sideways market or defined trading range.
Start yourFundedNext challenge
Thousands of traders are already getting rewarded by FundedNext. The only one missing from that list is you. Your challenge is open now.