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Risk-Reward Ratio

Risk Management

The relationship between how much you risk on a trade and how much you stand to gain. A 1:2 risk-reward ratio means you risk $1 to potentially make $2.

What Is the Risk-Reward Ratio?

The risk-reward ratio (RRR) compares your potential loss to your potential gain on any single trade. If you set a stop-loss 30 pips below entry and a take-profit 90 pips above, your RRR is 1:3. You are risking 1 unit to gain 3. This ratio is fundamental because it determines how often you need to win to be profitable overall.

With a 1:2 ratio, you only need to win 34% of your trades to break even. With 1:3, you need just 26%. This is why traders who maintain favorable risk-reward ratios can be profitable even with a win rate below 50%.

Practical Example

You go long EUR/USD at 1.0850 with a stop-loss at 1.0820 (30 pips risk) and a take-profit at 1.0910 (60 pips reward). Your risk-reward ratio is 1:2. Over 100 trades with this setup and a 45% win rate: 45 winners at 60 pips = 2,700 pips gained; 55 losers at 30 pips = 1,650 pips lost. Net profit: 1,050 pips. Use the Profit/Loss Calculator to convert those pips into actual dollar amounts based on your position size.

Key fact: Most consistently profitable retail traders maintain a minimum risk-reward ratio of 1:1.5, with many targeting 1:2 or higher. Anything below 1:1 means you need to win more than half your trades just to break even.

Common Mistakes

The biggest mistake is moving your stop-loss further away or your take-profit closer during a trade, which destroys the original ratio. Another pitfall is using a favorable ratio with unrealistic targets. Setting a 1:5 ratio looks great on paper, but if the target requires a 500-pip move in a pair that averages 80 pips daily, the trade is unlikely to reach it. Always consider the Average True Range of the pair to set realistic targets.