Risk to Reward Ratio Calculator
Use this calculator to determine the potential profit (reward) relative to the potential loss (risk) of a trade or investment. Understanding your risk to reward ratio is a fundamental aspect of effective risk management.
Calculation Results:
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The Risk to Reward Ratio (RRR) is a crucial metric used by traders and investors to evaluate the potential profitability of a trade relative to its potential loss. It helps in making informed decisions about whether a particular trade is worth taking, given the inherent risks.
Why is it Important?
- Risk Management: It's a cornerstone of effective risk management, helping you define how much you're willing to lose versus how much you stand to gain.
- Strategy Evaluation: By consistently applying a favorable RRR, you can maintain profitability even if your win rate isn't exceptionally high. For example, with a 1:2 RRR, you only need to win 34% of your trades to break even.
- Discipline: It encourages disciplined trading by forcing you to pre-define your exit points (stop loss and take profit) before entering a trade.
How to Calculate It
The basic formula for the Risk to Reward Ratio is:
Risk to Reward Ratio = Potential Gain / Potential Loss
To use the calculator above, you need three key prices:
- Entry Price: The price at which you plan to open your trade.
- Stop Loss Price: The price at which you will close your trade to limit potential losses.
- Take Profit Price: The price at which you will close your trade to secure potential profits.
The calculator then determines:
- Potential Loss: The difference between your Entry Price and your Stop Loss Price.
- Potential Gain: The difference between your Take Profit Price and your Entry Price.
Interpreting the Ratio
- 1:1 Ratio (e.g., 1.00): Your potential gain is equal to your potential loss. You would need a win rate of over 50% to be profitable after accounting for commissions.
- 1:2 Ratio (e.g., 2.00): Your potential gain is twice your potential loss. This is often considered a good ratio, as you can be profitable even with a win rate below 50%.
- 2:1 Ratio (e.g., 0.50): Your potential loss is twice your potential gain. This is generally considered unfavorable, as you would need a very high win rate (over 66%) to be profitable.
Most professional traders aim for a Risk to Reward Ratio of at least 1:1.5 or 1:2, meaning they seek to gain at least 1.5 to 2 times more than they risk on any given trade.
Example Scenario:
Let's say you are considering buying a stock:
- Entry Price: $50.00
- Stop Loss Price: $48.00 (You're willing to lose $2 per share)
- Take Profit Price: $56.00 (You expect to gain $6 per share)
Using the calculator:
- Potential Loss = $50.00 – $48.00 = $2.00
- Potential Gain = $56.00 – $50.00 = $6.00
- Risk to Reward Ratio = $6.00 / $2.00 = 3.00
This gives you a 1:3 Risk to Reward Ratio, which is highly favorable. For every $1 you risk, you stand to gain $3.