Leverage & Margin Calculator
Calculate required margin and visualize risk for leveraged positions
Position Parameters
Results
Leverage Comparison Table
| Leverage | Margin Required | 1% Move P&L | Liq. Distance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1x | $50,000.00 | $500.00 | 100.00% |
| 2x | $25,000.00 | $500.00 | 50.00% |
| 5x | $10,000.00 | $500.00 | 20.00% |
| 10x(current) | $5,000.00 | $500.00 | 10.00% |
| 25x | $2,000.00 | $500.00 | 4.00% |
| 50x | $1,000.00 | $500.00 | 2.00% |
| 100x | $500.00 | $500.00 | 1.00% |
| 125x | $400.00 | $500.00 | 0.80% |
P&L column shows the dollar gain/loss from a 1% price movement. Liquidation distance is approximate and excludes maintenance margin.
Related Calculators
Understanding Leverage in Crypto
Leverage is a financial mechanism that allows crypto traders to control a position significantly larger than their available capital. When you trade with 10x leverage, you deposit a fraction of the total trade value as collateral, known as margin, and the exchange effectively lends you the rest. This multiplier effect means that price movements are amplified: a 5% gain on a 10x leveraged position translates to a 50% return on your margin.
However, leverage is a double-edged sword. The same amplification applies to losses. A 5% adverse price move at 10x leverage results in a 50% loss of your margin. At 20x leverage, that same 5% move wipes out your entire position. Crypto markets are inherently volatile, with daily swings of 3% to 10% being common for major assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum. This volatility makes leverage both a powerful tool for experienced traders and a significant risk for those unfamiliar with margin mechanics.
How Margin Requirements Work
When you open a leveraged position, the exchange requires you to deposit a minimum amount of collateral called the initial margin. This is calculated by dividing the total position value by the leverage multiplier. For a $100,000 position at 25x leverage, your initial margin is $4,000. This collateral secures the exchange against potential losses on the borrowed funds.
Beyond initial margin, exchanges enforce a maintenance margin requirement, which is the minimum equity you must maintain while the position is open. If your unrealized losses reduce your margin below this threshold, the exchange issues a margin call or triggers automatic liquidation. Maintenance margin rates typically range from 0.3% to 0.5% of the position value depending on the exchange and asset. Understanding both margin requirements is critical to avoiding unexpected liquidations, especially during periods of rapid price movement or low liquidity.
Risk Levels at Different Leverage
Leverage risk is not linear. The jump from 1x to 5x adds modest risk, as your liquidation price remains far from your entry. But the jump from 25x to 50x dramatically increases your exposure to even small market fluctuations. Our calculator categorizes leverage into four risk tiers to help you assess your exposure at a glance:
- Low risk (1x to 5x): Liquidation distance is 20% or more from entry. Suitable for swing trading and longer holds. Most market corrections will not threaten your position.
- Medium risk (6x to 20x): Liquidation distance is 5% to 17% from entry. Common among intermediate traders. Requires active monitoring and stop-loss orders.
- High risk (21x to 50x): Liquidation distance is 2% to 5% from entry. Only appropriate for short-term trades with tight risk management. Routine volatility can trigger liquidation.
- Extreme risk (51x to 125x): Liquidation distance is less than 2% from entry. Used almost exclusively by professional scalpers. A single candlestick wick can liquidate the entire position.
Best Practices for Leverage Trading
Size your position based on risk, not opportunity. Determine the maximum dollar amount you are willing to lose before choosing your leverage and position size. A common guideline is risking no more than 1% to 2% of your total account per trade. If your account holds $10,000, your maximum risk per trade should be $100 to $200 regardless of the leverage used.
Always set a stop-loss before entering. A stop-loss order automatically closes your position at a predetermined price, limiting your downside. Place it well above (for shorts) or below (for longs) the liquidation price to maintain control over when and how you exit. The difference between a controlled stop-loss exit and an exchange liquidation can be significant due to slippage and liquidation penalties.
Monitor funding rates on perpetual contracts. When holding leveraged perpetual futures, you pay or receive funding every 8 hours. During strong trends, funding rates can reach 0.1% or more per interval, which compounds quickly on large leveraged positions. Factor this ongoing cost into your trade plan, especially for positions held over multiple days.
Use isolated margin mode. Isolated margin limits your risk to the collateral assigned to a specific trade. If that trade is liquidated, your remaining account balance stays intact. Cross margin, while offering more buffer, puts your entire account at risk from a single bad trade. For risk management, isolated margin is almost always the safer choice.