The Big Idea
Position size is how much of something you’re buying or selling on a single trade. It’s the answer to the question, “How big is this trade?”
Think of it like deciding how many cookies to buy. If you have $10, you might buy 5 cookies at $2 each, or 10 cookies at $1 each. Same money, different position sizes. In trading, position size decides how much of your money is at stake in any one trade.
Small positions = small wins and small losses. Big positions = big wins and big losses. Choosing the right position size is one of the most important decisions you make as a trader, maybe even more important than choosing WHAT to trade.
Why Position Size Is Huge
A lot of beginners focus all their energy on picking the right trades. They spend hours on analysis and charts. But they just throw a random amount of money at each trade.
That’s backwards! Here’s the thing: even the best trade picker in the world will blow up their account if they bet too much on each trade. And even an average trade picker can do well if they size their trades smartly.
Position sizing is what separates professionals from amateurs. It’s what keeps you in the game when losses hit. It’s what lets your edge actually work over time.
The Magic Formula
Here’s the simple formula every trader should know:
Position Size = Risk Amount ÷ Stop Distance
Let me explain each piece:
- Risk Amount: How many dollars you’re willing to lose on this trade
- Stop Distance: How far away your stop loss is from your entry
The formula tells you the biggest position you can take while keeping your risk at the level you chose.
Example
You have a $10,000 account. You follow the 1% rule, so your max risk per trade is $100.
You want to buy a stock at $50, with a stop loss at $48. Your stop distance is $2 per share.
Position Size = $100 ÷ $2 = 50 shares
So you should buy 50 shares. If the stop hits, you lose $2 per share × 50 shares = $100. Exactly your max risk.
Different Stop Distances, Different Sizes
Here’s what’s cool. The same risk amount works for any trade, but the position size changes based on the stop distance.
Using the same $10,000 account with $100 max risk:
| Entry | Stop | Distance | Position Size |
|---|---|---|---|
| $50 | $49 | $1 | 100 shares |
| $50 | $48 | $2 | 50 shares |
| $50 | $45 | $5 | 20 shares |
| $50 | $40 | $10 | 10 shares |
See? The farther the stop, the smaller the position. This keeps your dollar risk the same regardless of the chart setup. Genius!
The 1% Rule
The most popular position sizing rule is the 1% rule. Never risk more than 1% of your account on a single trade.
- $1,000 account → Max $10 risk per trade
- $10,000 account → Max $100 risk per trade
- $100,000 account → Max $1,000 risk per trade
Why 1%? Because it gives you room to have losing streaks without destroying your account.
With 1% risk:
- 5 losses in a row = 5% down (no big deal)
- 10 losses in a row = 10% down (annoying but recoverable)
- 20 losses in a row = 20% down (painful but survivable)
With 10% risk:
- 5 losses in a row = 50% down (disaster)
- 10 losses in a row = account wiped out
Some traders use 2% as their rule instead. That’s fine for experienced traders. For beginners, 1% is safer.
A Full Trade Example
Let me walk you through a complete trade with proper position sizing.
Sarah has $5,000. She risks 1% per trade, so max risk = $50.
She sees a setup on stock XYZ:
- Entry: $25
- Stop loss: $23.50 (below support)
- Target: $28 (at resistance)
- Stop distance: $1.50
- Reward distance: $3.00
- Risk-reward ratio: 1:2
She calculates position size: $50 ÷ $1.50 = 33 shares (rounded down)
She buys 33 shares at $25 for $825 total. She sets her stop at $23.50 and target at $28.
Scenario A – Stop hits: She sells 33 shares at $23.50. Loss: $1.50 × 33 = $49.50. Right around her $50 max risk!
Scenario B – Target hits: She sells 33 shares at $28. Profit: $3.00 × 33 = $99. A 2:1 win!
Notice how Sarah only put $825 into a $5,000 account? That’s normal. You don’t use all your money on one trade. You use just enough to hit your risk target.
Position Size in Different Markets
Stocks
Measured in shares. Use the formula above. Simple.
Forex
Measured in lots (standard, mini, or micro). You need to know pip value to calculate.
Example: $50 max risk, 25 pip stop. Pip value for micro lot = $0.10. Position = $50 ÷ ($0.10 × 25 pips) = 20 micro lots.
Futures
Measured in contracts. Each contract has its own tick value. Calculate based on how many ticks your stop is away.
Crypto
Measured in coins or fractions of coins. Same formula: risk ÷ stop distance = position size.
Common Mistakes Beginners Make
Mistake 1: Fixed Dollar Positions
“I always buy $1,000 worth of stock per trade.” Sounds organized, but it doesn’t account for stop distance. A $1,000 position with a $5 stop has very different risk than a $1,000 position with a $50 stop.
Mistake 2: Fixed Share Positions
“I always buy 100 shares.” Same problem. 100 shares with a $2 stop is $200 risk. 100 shares with a $10 stop is $1,000 risk. Very different!
Mistake 3: Sizing Up After Wins
You had a winning trade. You feel confident. Next trade, you size up to 3% risk. It loses. Now you’ve lost more in one trade than you made in several. Stick to your rule regardless of recent results.
Mistake 4: Sizing Up During Drawdowns
“I’m down, so I need to make more per trade to recover.” Deadly logic. Drawdowns are when you size DOWN, not up. Trying to recover by risking more is how small drawdowns become total disasters.
Mistake 5: Ignoring Correlation
You buy 5 tech stocks at 1% risk each. Feels like 5 separate trades with 5% total risk. But if tech crashes, they all lose together. Functionally, you have one 5% risk trade. Consider how correlated your positions are.
Mistake 6: Using All Your Capital
“I have $10,000, so I should buy $10,000 of stock.” Why? Your risk is based on stop distance, not account size. A small position with a tight stop can have the same risk as a huge position with a wide stop.
Position Sizing and Confidence
Should you size bigger on “high conviction” trades? It’s tempting, but be careful.
Every trader thinks THIS trade will work. That’s why they take it. But the market doesn’t care about your conviction. Your most confident trades can still lose.
For most beginners: use the same risk per trade regardless of conviction. Consistency beats prediction.
For experienced traders with proven track records: some will size up slightly on the best setups. But this requires data to back it up, not just “I feel good about this one.”
The Big Picture
Position sizing is the control knob that decides how much your trading affects your account. Too big and you’ll blow up. Too small and you’ll never grow. Just right and you can survive losses while letting winners add up.
Here’s what to remember:
- Position Size = Risk Amount ÷ Stop Distance
- Use the 1% rule: never risk more than 1% of your account per trade
- Position size changes based on stop distance, not account size alone
- Fixed dollar or fixed share sizing is a mistake
- Don’t size up on “sure things” or during drawdowns
- Consistent sizing lets your edge play out over time
- Your trade quality matters. Your sizing matters MORE.
Most beginners obsess over picking the right trades. Pros obsess over sizing them correctly. A pro with average trade picks and perfect sizing beats a beginner with amazing trade picks and random sizing. Every. Single. Time.
Master position sizing, and you’ve mastered half of professional trading.
Related Terms
- What Is a Stop Loss? — The other half of position sizing math
- What Is Leverage? — How leverage relates to position size
- What Is Drawdown? — How position size controls drawdown
- What Is Risk of Ruin? — Why oversizing blows up accounts
- Sizing Up and Sizing Down — When to adjust sizes
← Back to the Complete Trading Terms Glossary
Focus on the process. Trust the stats. Stay consistent.