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The difference between the bid (sell) price and the ask (buy) price of a currency pair. The spread is the primary cost of making a trade.

What Is the Spread?

The spread is the gap between the Bid Price and the Ask Price of a currency pair. When you see EUR/USD quoted at 1.0850/1.0852, the spread is 2 Pips. You always buy at the higher ask price and sell at the lower bid price, so the spread is a cost you pay on every trade.

Types of Spreads

Brokers offer two main spread types. Fixed spreads stay the same regardless of market conditions and are common with market-maker brokers. Variable (floating) spreads change based on liquidity and volatility. ECN and STP brokers typically offer variable spreads that can be extremely tight during peak hours (EUR/USD under 0.5 pips) but widen during news events or low-liquidity periods.

Key fact: EUR/USD has the tightest spread of any forex pair, often just 0.1 to 1.0 pips during London and New York sessions. Exotic pairs like USD/TRY can have spreads of 10 pips or more.

Calculating Spread Cost

The dollar cost of the spread depends on your Lot size. For a standard lot of EUR/USD with a 1-pip spread, you pay $10 in spread cost. For a micro lot, it is $0.10. You can use our Pip Value Calculator to calculate the exact cost. Lower spreads mean lower trading costs, which matters significantly for active traders and scalpers.