Profit Forex Calculator

Check pip profit, swap impact, and account returns. Compare long or short trades with fees. Export clear summaries for records after each planned position.

Calculator Inputs

Reset

Example Data Table

Pair Direction Lot Entry Exit Pips Estimated Result
EUR/USD Long 1.00 1.0800 1.0950 150 Profit before costs
GBP/USD Short 0.50 1.2700 1.2550 150 Profit before costs
USD/JPY Long 0.20 155.20 154.70 -50 Loss before costs
AUD/USD Long 0.10 0.6500 0.6535 35 Profit before costs

Formula Used

Units Traded = Lot Size × Contract Size

Long Pips = (Exit Price − Entry Price) ÷ Pip Size

Short Pips = (Entry Price − Exit Price) ÷ Pip Size

Pip Value = Units Traded × Pip Size × Quote to Account Rate

Gross Profit = Price Move × Units Traded × Quote to Account Rate

Net Profit = Gross Profit − Spread Cost − Slippage Cost − Commission + Swap

Margin Required = Units Traded × Entry Price × Quote to Account Rate ÷ Leverage

Return = Net Profit ÷ Account Balance × 100

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the currency pair and your account currency.
  2. Select long for a buy trade or short for a sell trade.
  3. Enter lot size, contract size, entry price, and exit price.
  4. Set the pip size. Use 0.0001 for most pairs and 0.01 for many JPY pairs.
  5. Add the quote to account conversion rate when needed.
  6. Enter spread, slippage, commission, swap, leverage, balance, and stop loss.
  7. Press the calculate button to see the result above the form.
  8. Use the CSV or PDF button to save the report.

Forex Profit Planning Guide

A forex profit calculator helps traders review trade outcomes before or after execution. It converts price movement into pips, money value, margin need, return, and risk. This is useful because currency pairs move in small price steps. A small move can still create a large gain or loss when lot size is high.

Why Profit Depends on Pips

Most forex trades are measured in pips. A pip is usually 0.0001 for many pairs. JPY pairs often use 0.01. The calculator lets you choose the pip size, so exotic pairs can be handled. Profit starts with the difference between entry and exit. For a buy trade, a higher exit price creates profit. For a sell trade, a lower exit price creates profit.

Lot Size and Pip Value

Lot size controls exposure. One standard lot often equals 100,000 base units. Mini and micro lots are smaller. Pip value comes from units multiplied by pip size. The result is usually in the quote currency. If your account uses another currency, a conversion rate changes the result into your account currency. This makes the report more practical.

Costs, Margin, and Risk

Trading costs change the final result. Spread, slippage, commission, and swap can reduce profit. Positive swap can increase it. Margin shows the estimated capital reserved by the broker. It depends on notional value and leverage. The stop loss field estimates possible risk. This helps compare reward against the amount exposed.

Using the Report

The result area summarizes gross profit, costs, net profit, pips, pip value, margin, and return. CSV export is useful for spreadsheets. PDF export is useful for keeping a simple record. The example table shows common situations. It can guide new users before they enter their own numbers.

Better Decisions

This calculator does not predict future markets. It organizes trade math. Use it with a trading plan, position sizing rules, and risk limits. Check every input carefully. Wrong prices, lot sizes, or conversion rates can change results. Review costs from your broker. Then compare possible trades with consistent assumptions. Record your assumptions for each trade. Over time, saved reports can reveal habits, weak setups, stronger risk control choices, and common sizing mistakes more quickly.

FAQs

What is a forex profit calculator?

It estimates profit or loss from a currency trade. It uses entry price, exit price, direction, lot size, pip size, conversion rate, and trading costs.

What is pip value?

Pip value is the money change from one pip movement. It depends on lot size, contract size, pip size, and account currency conversion.

Why do I need a conversion rate?

A conversion rate is needed when the quote currency differs from your account currency. It converts the trade result into your account currency.

How does direction affect profit?

Long trades profit when exit price is above entry price. Short trades profit when exit price is below entry price.

Are spread and slippage included?

Yes. The calculator subtracts spread and slippage costs using pip value. This gives a more realistic net result.

What does margin required mean?

Margin required is the estimated capital reserved for the trade. It is based on notional trade value and leverage.

Can this calculator predict forex prices?

No. It only calculates trade math. It does not forecast market direction or guarantee any trading result.

Why is my stop loss risk shown?

The stop loss risk helps compare possible loss with possible reward. It supports better position sizing and trade planning.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.