“What percentage should I risk per trade?” is one of the most searched questions in trading — and most of the answers online give you a single number without context. The truth is that the right percentage depends entirely on three factors that most guides do not mention: how large your account is, what win rate your strategy produces, and how many trades you take per week. Ignore any one of these three and your risk percentage will be wrong for your situation.
This guide gives you the framework to determine the right risk percentage for your specific situation, along with reference tables, worked examples, and a five-question worksheet to find your number.
The Three Factors That Determine Your Risk Percentage
Before looking at any table or rule of thumb, you need three data points:
1. Account size and type: A $500 account cannot use the same percentage logic as a $50,000 account because the minimum executable lot size creates a floor. A funded prop account cannot use the same percentage as a retail account because drawdown rules create a ceiling.
2. Strategy win rate: A strategy that wins 65% of the time can sustain higher risk per trade than one that wins 40% of the time, even if both are profitable (because the 40% strategy relies on larger winners). Using a high risk percentage with a low win rate strategy creates deep drawdowns that are psychologically difficult to survive.
3. Trading frequency: If you take 1 trade per week, a bad week means 1 loss. If you take 10 trades per week, a bad week means 10 losses. Frequency determines how quickly losing streaks develop and how much capital you need to protect between them.
Risk Tier Reference Table
| Risk Tier | % Range | Who Uses This | Recommended For | Max Drawdown Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative | 0.25–0.5% | Funded traders, beginners, recovery mode | Prop firm accounts, learning phase, after drawdowns | 10 losses = 2.5–5% drawdown |
| Moderate | 0.5–1% | Experienced retail traders | Standard retail forex, consistent strategies | 10 losses = 5–9.5% drawdown |
| Aggressive | 1–2% | High-conviction retail, short-term traders | Only highest-quality setups, never routine | 10 losses = 9.5–18% drawdown |
| Reckless | 2%+ | Gamblers, under-capitalized beginners | Never advisable for serious traders | 10 losses = 18–45%+ drawdown |
The conservative tier is not slow — it is sustainable. A trader using 0.5% risk with a 1:2 R:R and 50% win rate grows account by approximately 0.25% per trade on average. Over 200 trades, that compounds to meaningful growth without blowing up in the inevitable losing streaks.
Win Rate vs Risk Percentage — Finding the Right Relationship
Your strategy’s win rate has a direct bearing on how much you can safely risk per trade. Lower win rate strategies rely on large winners to be profitable, which means losing streaks are longer and more frequent. Higher win rate strategies can sustain slightly more risk because drawdown periods are shorter.
Use this table to find the maximum risk percentage appropriate for your win rate:
| Win Rate | Average R:R | Expected Value per Trade | Max Recommended Risk % |
|---|---|---|---|
| 35% | 2.5:1 | +0.225R | 0.5% |
| 40% | 2.0:1 | +0.20R | 0.5–0.75% |
| 45% | 1.8:1 | +0.175R | 0.75% |
| 50% | 1.5:1 | +0.25R | 1% |
| 55% | 1.3:1 | +0.20R | 1% |
| 60% | 1.1:1 | +0.26R | 1–1.5% |
| 65%+ | 1.0:1 | +0.30R | 1.5% |
Expected value per trade = (Win Rate × Reward) − (Loss Rate × Risk). A positive expected value is necessary but not sufficient — you also need position sizing that lets you survive the sequences of losses that will occur while your edge plays out.
Trading Frequency Impact — How Often You Trade Changes Everything
Two traders can use the same risk percentage and produce very different drawdown profiles purely because of how many trades they take:
Low frequency (1–3 trades per week): At 1% risk, a 5-trade losing streak takes 2–5 weeks to develop. This gives time for psychological recovery between losses and makes the percentage feel manageable.
Medium frequency (5–15 trades per week): A 5-trade losing streak can happen in a single day. At 1% risk, losing 5 trades in a day represents 5% of account — uncomfortable but not catastrophic. At 2%, that same losing day is 10% of account.
High frequency (20+ trades per week): At high frequency, statistical losing streaks of 10+ trades can complete within a single week. Risk percentage must be reduced to 0.25–0.5% to prevent a single bad week from becoming a significant account event.
| Trades per Week | Recommended Max Risk % | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| 1–3 | 1% | Losing streaks develop slowly, time for recovery |
| 4–8 | 0.75% | Multiple losses per week possible |
| 9–15 | 0.5% | Bad weeks can produce 8–10 losses |
| 16–30 | 0.25–0.5% | High frequency amplifies streak risk |
| 30+ | 0.1–0.25% | Statistical streaks occur within single sessions |
Funded Account Percentage Rules — What the Firms Require
Prop firm funded accounts have hard constraints that determine the effective ceiling for risk percentage. Here are the rules and recommended personal limits for the major firms:
| Firm | Daily Loss Limit | Max Drawdown | Firm’s Implied Max Risk % | Recommended Personal Risk % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FTMO | 5% daily | 10% max | 5% (1 trade) | 0.5% |
| Apex Trader Funding | 3% daily | Trailing 6% | 3% (1 trade) | 0.25–0.5% |
| The5ers | 4% daily | 8% max | 4% (1 trade) | 0.5% |
| Topstep | $1,500/day ($50k) | 3% trailing | Variable | 0.25–0.5% |
| MyForexFunds (before shutdown) | 5% daily | 10% max | 5% (1 trade) | 0.5% |
The “implied max risk %” is what you could risk if you only took one trade per day. In practice, funded traders take multiple trades, which means the personal limit must be a fraction of the daily limit. With 4 trades per day and a 4% daily limit, each trade should be capped at 1%. With 8 trades, each should be 0.5%.
The professional standard across all prop firms is 0.5% per trade, which provides enough buffer to have 6–8 losing trades in a day before the firm’s daily limit is breached.
How to Calculate the Right Percentage for Your Strategy
The expected value formula gives you a mathematical basis for choosing your risk percentage:
Expected Value = (Win Rate × Average Win) − (Loss Rate × Average Loss)
Where wins and losses are expressed in R (multiples of risk). If you risk 1R and your average winner is 1.8R:
EV at 50% win rate = (0.50 × 1.8R) − (0.50 × 1R) = 0.90R − 0.50R = +0.40R per trade
A positive EV confirms you have an edge. A larger EV means a more robust edge — which supports slightly higher risk. An EV near zero means keep risk very tight (0.25%) because even small deviations from your average can turn the edge negative.
Use the TRADE90 position size calculator after confirming your EV is positive to calculate the exact lot size for your chosen percentage.
Position Sizing Worksheet — 5 Questions to Find Your Ideal Risk %
Work through these five questions to determine your specific risk percentage:
Question 1: What type of account are you trading?
- Retail personal account → you can use the full 0.5–1% range
- Funded prop account → your ceiling is 0.5%
Question 2: What is your verified win rate over at least 50 trades?
- Below 45% → use 0.25–0.5%
- 45–55% → use 0.5–0.75%
- Above 55% → use up to 1%
- Unknown (new strategy or new trader) → use 0.25% until verified
Question 3: How many trades do you take per week?
- 1–5 trades → standard percentage applies
- 6–15 trades → reduce by 25%
- 16+ trades → reduce by 50%
Question 4: Are you currently in drawdown?
- If account is down more than 5% from peak → cut to half your normal risk until recovered
- If at or near peak → standard percentage applies
Question 5: Are you in a learning phase with this instrument or setup?
- New instrument or setup → start at 0.25% for first 20 trades
- Established instrument and setup → apply your calculated percentage
Combine the answers: if you are on a funded account (0.5% ceiling), with a 48% win rate (−25% reduction factor), taking 10 trades per week (−25% reduction), your working range is approximately 0.25–0.38%. Round down to 0.25%.
Starting Low and Scaling Up — The Practical Approach
The systematic approach to finding your right percentage is to start at 0.25%, document your results, and scale upward only after demonstrating consistency.
Phase 1 (0.25% for 30 trades): The goal is not profit — it is process. Are you following your entry rules? Are you placing stops at logical levels? Are you exiting at target? Track the percentage of trades where you followed your plan.
Phase 2 (0.5% for 30 trades): If Phase 1 showed 75%+ rule adherence and a positive expected value, step to 0.5%. The dollar amounts are larger; notice whether this changes your behavior.
Phase 3 (0.75–1% for 30 trades): Only if Phase 2 maintained consistency. By this point, you have 60 trades of data with your system. You know your win rate, your average R:R, and your expected value. You can position-size with confidence.
For a deeper look at how your risk percentage translates directly to lot size and dollar exposure, read How Much Should I Risk Per Trade?.
For funded account-specific risk management, see the funded trader risk calculator.
FAQ
What is the best risk percentage for forex?
For retail forex traders with an established strategy, 0.5–1% per trade is the professional standard. This range allows you to survive losing streaks of 10–20 trades without significant damage while still growing your account at a meaningful rate. Beginners should start at 0.25% and scale up after demonstrating consistent execution over at least 30 trades.
Should I use 1% or 2% risk?
For routine trading, 1% is the maximum you should use. 2% risk means 10 consecutive losses reduces your account by 18%, which is both financially and psychologically damaging. Reserve 2% strictly for your highest-conviction setups — no more than 1–2 times per month — and only if your strategy’s historical data clearly supports a higher-risk application.
Can I change my risk percentage between trades?
You can vary your risk percentage, but doing so based on how “good” a setup feels is dangerous because confidence and actual win probability are poorly correlated. A better approach is to set a standard risk percentage and use it consistently, then reserve a higher tier (e.g., 1.5%) for setups that meet pre-defined objective criteria — not subjective “feel.”
What percentage do day traders risk?
Professional day traders typically use 0.1–0.5% per trade because they take many trades per session. At 0.5% and 10 trades per day, a complete wipeout of all trades risks 5% of account — manageable. Retail day traders should stay in the 0.25–0.5% range. Higher frequency means lower risk per trade, not higher.
What risk percentage do prop firms require?
Prop firms do not specify a per-trade risk percentage — they specify daily loss limits and maximum drawdown limits. But those constraints imply a maximum per-trade risk. FTMO’s 5% daily limit, assuming 5 trades per day, implies 1% per trade maximum. The professional standard is to use 0.5% regardless of what the math allows, because unexpected losing days of 6+ trades occur and should not breach firm limits.