Table of Contents
What Is Position Sizing?
Position sizing is determining how much of your capital to risk on a single trade. It answers the question: "How much Bitcoin should I buy?" (not based on how much you can afford, but based on how much you're willing to lose if the trade goes wrong).
Proper position sizing is arguably the most important risk management skill in crypto trading. It's the difference between a losing streak that wipes out your account and one that you can recover from.
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Open Position Size Calculator →Why Position Sizing Matters in Crypto
Cryptocurrency is one of the most volatile asset classes in the world. Bitcoin can move 10% in a single day. Altcoins can drop 50% in a week. Without disciplined position sizing, even a few bad trades can devastate your portfolio.
Consider these two traders with a $10,000 portfolio:
- Trader A bets 50% on each trade. One bad trade = $5,000 loss (50% drawdown)
- Trader B risks 1% per trade ($100). One bad trade = $100 loss (1% drawdown)
Trader B can lose 50 trades in a row and still have $5,000 left. Trader A needs just 2 bad trades to be nearly wiped out. Position sizing is how professional traders stay in the game long enough to be consistently profitable.
The Position Size Formula
The standard position sizing formula calculates exactly how much to invest based on your account size, risk tolerance, and stop-loss placement:
Position Size ($) = Risk Amount ÷ Stop-Loss %
Coins to Buy = Position Size ÷ Current Price
Let's break down each component:
- Account Size: Your total trading capital
- Risk % per trade: What percentage of your account you're willing to lose (typically 1–2%)
- Stop-Loss %: How far below your entry price you'll exit if wrong
The 1% Risk Rule Explained
The most widely followed position sizing rule is to never risk more than 1–2% of your total account on a single trade. This is sometimes called the "1% rule" or the "2% rule."
Why 1–2%? It's the sweet spot between:
- Risking enough to generate meaningful profits when you're right
- Losing small enough amounts to stay in the game when you're wrong
| Account Size | Risk per Trade (1%) | 50 Losses in a Row | Remaining Capital |
|---|---|---|---|
| $1,000 | $10 | 50 × $10 = $500 | $500 (50% remaining) |
| $5,000 | $50 | 50 × $50 = $2,500 | $2,500 (50% remaining) |
| $10,000 | $100 | 50 × $100 = $5,000 | $5,000 (50% remaining) |
| $50,000 | $500 | 50 × $500 = $25,000 | $25,000 (50% remaining) |
Even after an extremely bad run of 50 consecutive losses, you'd still have 50% of your capital left. That's the power of the 1% rule.
Step-by-Step Examples
Example 1: Bitcoin Trade with 1% Risk
Account Size: $10,000
Risk per Trade: 1% = $100
Bitcoin Price (Entry): $50,000
Stop-Loss: $48,000 (4% below entry)
Risk Amount: $100 (1% of $10,000)
Stop-Loss %: ($50,000 − $48,000) / $50,000 = 4%
Position Size: $100 ÷ 4% = $2,500
If stop-loss hits: lose $100 (1% of account) ✓
Example 2: Altcoin Trade with 2% Risk
Account Size: $5,000
Risk per Trade: 2% = $100
Entry Price: $2.50 (some altcoin)
Stop-Loss: $2.25 (10% below entry)
Stop-Loss %: ($2.50 − $2.25) / $2.50 = 10%
Position Size: $100 ÷ 10% = $1,000
If stop-loss hits: lose $100 (2% of account) ✓
Setting Your Stop-Loss Correctly
Your stop-loss placement determines your position size. A tighter stop-loss allows a larger position; a wider stop-loss forces a smaller position.
Good stop-loss placement is based on technical levels, not arbitrary percentages:
- Below a support level: Where the market structure says your trade idea is wrong
- Below a recent swing low: A common reversal point
- Below a moving average (e.g., 200-day MA for longer-term trades)
Never move your stop-loss further away to avoid being stopped out. This is the most common way traders blow up their accounts. Your stop-loss is your insurance policy. Don't cancel it after buying it.
Risk-to-Reward Ratio (R:R)
Position sizing works best when paired with a minimum risk-to-reward ratio. The R:R ratio compares your potential profit to your potential loss:
Most professional traders require a minimum 2:1 R:R ratio: meaning the potential profit is at least twice the potential loss. This means you only need to be right 34% of the time to be profitable.
Entry: $50,000 | Stop-Loss: $48,000 | Target: $56,000
Risk per coin: $50,000 − $48,000 = $2,000
Reward per coin: $56,000 − $50,000 = $6,000
Common Position Sizing Mistakes
- Risking too much per trade: FOMO leads traders to bet 10–20% on a single trade. One loss can cripple your portfolio.
- Not using a stop-loss: Without a stop-loss, your position size calculation is meaningless. A trade without a stop-loss has unlimited downside.
- Ignoring fees: Trading fees reduce your effective profit and increase your effective loss. Factor them in.
- Over-trading: Taking too many positions simultaneously spreads your capital thin and increases total risk exposure.
- Revenge trading after a loss: Increasing position size to "make back" losses is how accounts get wiped. Stick to your 1–2% rule always.
Frequently Asked Questions
What percentage should I risk per crypto trade?
Most professional traders recommend 1–2% of your total account per trade. Beginners should start at 0.5–1% until they build a proven track record. Never risk more than 5% on a single trade, regardless of how confident you feel.
What's the difference between position size and trade size?
They're often used interchangeably, but technically: your position size is the dollar value you're putting into a trade, while your trade size might refer to the number of coins. Our position size calculator gives you both.
How do I size positions for leveraged crypto trades?
With leverage, your position size formula stays the same, but you must account for liquidation risk. A 10x leveraged position with a 5% stop-loss would liquidate before your stop triggers. For leveraged trading, use tighter stops (1–3%) and lower risk percentages (0.5–1%).
Should I use the same position size for every trade?
Your risk amount should be consistent (e.g., always 1% of account), but the actual position size will vary based on where you place your stop-loss. A trade with a tight 2% stop requires a larger position than a trade with a wide 10% stop.
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