What is a Lot: A Beginner's Guide to Overlooked Concepts

When trading for the first time, the most common question people ask is “Should I trade 0.01 lot or 1.0 lot?” But actually, the correct question should be “How much am I willing to lose to trade safely?” This difference is what separates professional traders from ordinary traders.

Why Lot Size Matters More Than Entry Points

Before diving into the calculation formulas, let’s consider a real scenario. Suppose you have $1,000 in capital and, after analysis, you’re confident that EUR/USD will go up. You and a friend enter a trade at the same point, set a Stop Loss 50 Pips away from the entry point, but there’s a key difference:

  • Friend 1: Chooses 1.0 Lot (cost $10 per Pip)
  • Friend 2: Chooses 0.01 Lot (cost $0.10 per Pip)

When the market drops 50 Pips and hits the Stop Loss:

  • Friend 1: Loses $500 (portfolio remains $500 only)
  • Friend 2: Loses $5 (portfolio remains $995)

Friend 1, if wrong again, could wipe out their account, but Friend 2 can continue trading for a long time.

This highlights a key point: Lot size is not about making profit but about surviving losses.

What is a Lot? The Truth That Beginners Don’t Know

The fundamental issue in the Forex market

The foreign exchange market moves in tiny units called “Pips” (For example, EUR/USD moving from 1.0850 to 1.0851 = up 1 Pip)

But 1 Pip is only worth $0.0001 per unit of currency. If you buy just 1 Euro and the price moves 100 Pips, you only make a profit of 1 cent. It’s impossible to profit like that.

Therefore, the market and brokers created a “standard unit” to aggregate small trades into a meaningful size. This standard unit is called Lot.

Definition and Meaning of a Lot

In the Forex market, the international standard states:

1 Standard Lot = 100,000 units of the base currency(

The “base currency” is the currency listed first in the currency pair:

  • EUR/USD: 1 Lot = 100,000 Euros )not dollars(
  • USD/JPY: 1 Lot = 100,000 Dollars
  • GBP/USD: 1 Lot = 100,000 Pounds

Understanding this is the first step toward accurate risk calculation.

Types of Lots Traders Need to Know

Since 1 Standard Lot )100,000 units( requires a huge amount of capital, brokers divide Lot sizes into smaller units to allow traders of various levels to access the market and manage risk flexibly.

) Main Lot Types Table

Type Volume ### Number of Units Approximate Value per Pip (EUR/USD) Suitable For
Standard Lot 1.0 100,000 About ( Professionals, Funds
Mini Lot 0.1 10,000 About ) Intermediate Traders
Micro Lot 0.01 1,000 About $0.10 Beginners, Strategy Testing
Nano Lot 0.001 100 About $0.01 Beginners Learning

Most brokers now choose 0.01 Lot $10 Micro Lot$1 as the starting size because it provides real trading experience without risking all your capital.

The Relationship Between Lot Size and Profit-Loss

An important relationship to remember:

Lot Size = Multiplier of Profit and Loss

For currency pairs where USD is on the right side (like EUR/USD, GBP/USD):

  • 1.0 Lot: 1 Pip movement ≈ (profit/loss)
  • 0.1 Lot: 1 Pip movement ≈ $10 profit/loss$1
  • 0.01 Lot: 1 Pip movement ≈ $0.10 profit/loss

Learn from the comparison

Suppose you have $10,000 and decide to trade EUR/USD

Scenario: Enter a buy at 1.0850, set Take Profit at 1.0900 (50 Pips up), and Stop Loss at 1.0800 (50 Pips down)

Case 1 - Aggressive Trader (using 1.0 Lot)

  • Win: 50 Pips × $10 = +$500 (+5% of portfolio)
  • Loss: 50 Pips × $10 = -$500 (-5% of portfolio)

Case 2 - Cautious Trader (using 0.01 Lot)

  • Win: 50 Pips × $0.10 = +$5 (+0.05% of portfolio)
  • Loss: 50 Pips × $0.10 = -$5 (-0.05% of portfolio)

When losing:

  • Case 1: Remaining $9,500 (Critical situation)
  • Case 2: Remaining $9,995 (Still safe)

If Case 1 makes another mistake, the account could be wiped out, but Case 2 still has hundreds of opportunities.

How Professional Traders Calculate Lot Size

3 Variables to Set Before Opening a Trade

Before trading, always have a financial plan including:

  1. Account Equity: Your capital in the account (e.g., $10,000)
  2. Risk Percentage: How much percentage you are willing to lose per trade (Professionals recommend 1-3%)
  3. Stop Loss Distance: How many Pips away you set your Stop Loss from the entry point

Standard Calculation Formula

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