Back to Help Center
Trading Basics

What is a Pip in Forex Trading?

Last updated on October 16, 2025

What is a Pip in Forex Trading?

A pip (Point in Percentage) is the smallest price movement in forex trading. Understanding pips is fundamental to calculating profits, losses, and managing risk.

Definition

Pip: The fourth decimal place in most currency pairs (0.0001), or the second decimal place for yen pairs (0.01).

Examples

  • EUR/USD: 1.1050 → 1.1051 = 1 pip move
  • GBP/USD: 1.2500 → 1.2505 = 5 pips move
  • USD/JPY: 110.25 → 110.26 = 1 pip move

Pip Values

Major Pairs (0.0001)

  • EUR/USD
  • GBP/USD
  • AUD/USD
  • NZD/USD
  • USD/CAD
  • USD/CHF

Example: 1.1234

  • 1 = One dollar
  • .12 = Twelve cents
  • .003 = Three-tenths of a cent
  • .0004 = Four ten-thousandths (1 pip)

Yen Pairs (0.01)

  • USD/JPY
  • EUR/JPY
  • GBP/JPY
  • AUD/JPY

Example: 110.25

  • 110 = One hundred ten yen
  • .2 = Two-tenths of a yen
  • .05 = Five-hundredths (1 pip)

Pipettes (Fractional Pips)

Some brokers quote prices to 5 decimal places (or 3 for yen):

Pipette = 1/10th of a pip

Example

  • EUR/USD: 1.10503
  • The 3 is a pipette (0.1 pips)

Calculating Pip Value

The monetary value of a pip depends on:

  1. Currency pair
  2. Position size (lot size)
  3. Exchange rate

Formula

Pip Value = (One Pip / Exchange Rate) × Lot Size

Standard Lot (100,000 units)

  • EUR/USD: $10 per pip
  • GBP/USD: $10 per pip
  • USD/JPY: ~$9.09 per pip (varies with rate)

Mini Lot (10,000 units)

  • EUR/USD: $1 per pip
  • GBP/USD: $1 per pip
  • USD/JPY: ~$0.91 per pip

Micro Lot (1,000 units)

  • EUR/USD: $0.10 per pip
  • GBP/USD: $0.10 per pip
  • USD/JPY: ~$0.09 per pip

Practical Examples

Example 1: Profit Calculation

  • Pair: EUR/USD
  • Entry: 1.1000
  • Exit: 1.1050
  • Position Size: 1 standard lot
  • Movement: 50 pips
  • Pip Value: $10
  • Profit: 50 pips × $10 = $500

Example 2: Loss Calculation

  • Pair: GBP/USD
  • Entry: 1.2500
  • Exit: 1.2450
  • Position Size: 0.5 standard lots
  • Movement: -50 pips
  • Pip Value: $5 (half lot)
  • Loss: 50 pips × $5 = -$250

Example 3: Yen Pair

  • Pair: USD/JPY
  • Entry: 110.00
  • Exit: 110.50
  • Position Size: 1 standard lot
  • Movement: 50 pips
  • Pip Value: ~$9.09
  • Profit: 50 pips × $9.09 = ~$454.50

Why Pips Matter

1. Profit/Loss Measurement

Track performance in pips:

  • "I made 100 pips today"
  • Standardized across all pairs

2. Risk Management

Set stop losses in pips:

  • "20 pip stop loss"
  • Calculate position size based on pip risk

3. Spread Costs

Broker spreads quoted in pips:

  • "EUR/USD spread: 1.5 pips"
  • Lower is better

4. Strategy Development

Measure strategy effectiveness:

  • "Average win: 30 pips"
  • "Average loss: 15 pips"
  • Risk-reward ratio: 1:2

Spread and Pips

Spread = Difference between bid and ask price (in pips)

Example

  • Bid: 1.1000
  • Ask: 1.1002
  • Spread: 2 pips

This means: You need the market to move 2 pips in your favor just to break even.

Points vs Pips

⚠️ Don't Confuse:

  • Pip = Standard measurement (0.0001 or 0.01)
  • Point = Sometimes used for indices/stocks
  • In forex: pip = point

Pips in Exotic Pairs

Some exotic pairs have different pip values:

  • USD/THB (Thai Baht): Often quoted to 2 decimals
  • USD/HUF (Hungarian Forint): Often quoted to 2 decimals

Check with your broker for specific pair conventions.

Using Pips for Position Sizing

The 1% Rule Example

  • Account: $10,000
  • Risk per trade: 1% = $100
  • Stop loss: 20 pips
  • Pip value needed: $100 / 20 pips = $5 per pip
  • Position size: 0.5 standard lots (EUR/USD)

Pip Calculators

Most brokers provide pip calculators:

  • Enter pair
  • Enter position size
  • See pip value
  • Useful for quick calculations

Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Confusing Decimals

❌ Thinking 1.1050 to 1.1055 is 5 pips ✅ Actually 0.5 pips (or 5 pipettes)

Mistake 2: Ignoring Yen Pairs

❌ Applying 4-decimal logic to yen ✅ Remember yen uses 2 decimals

Mistake 3: Not Accounting for Lot Size

❌ Assuming all pips worth same amount ✅ Pip value scales with position size

Key Takeaways

  1. Pip = Smallest price movement (usually 0.0001 or 0.01 for yen)
  2. Pip value depends on lot size and currency pair
  3. Spreads measured in pips (lower = better)
  4. Essential for calculating P/L and managing risk
  5. Use calculators when unsure

Understanding pips is fundamental to forex trading success!


Related Articles:

Was this article helpful?

    What is a Pip in Forex Trading? | Help Center | FN Pulse