Liquidation Price Calculator
Calculate your exact liquidation price for any leveraged position
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What Is Liquidation in Crypto Trading?
Liquidation is the automatic closure of a leveraged trading position by the exchange when the trader's losses approach the amount of margin they have deposited. In cryptocurrency futures trading, you borrow funds from the exchange to open positions larger than your account balance. This borrowed capital comes with a requirement: you must maintain a minimum amount of margin, known as the maintenance margin, at all times.
When the market moves against your position and your effective margin drops below the maintenance margin threshold, the exchange's liquidation engine takes over. It forcibly closes your position at the current market price to prevent the loss from exceeding your deposited collateral. The result is typically the loss of your entire margin for that position, plus any applicable liquidation fees charged by the exchange.
Liquidation is one of the most significant risks in leveraged trading. Understanding exactly where your liquidation price sits relative to the current market price is essential for managing risk. This calculator helps you determine that critical threshold so you can set appropriate stop-losses and avoid unexpected position closures.
How to Calculate Your Liquidation Price
The liquidation price depends on several factors: your entry price, leverage level, margin mode, and the maintenance margin rate set by your exchange. In isolated margin mode, only the margin allocated to a specific position is considered. The formula for a long position is:
Liquidation Price = Entry Price - (Isolated Margin - Maintenance Margin) / Position Size
For a short position, the formula becomes:
Liquidation Price = Entry Price + (Isolated Margin - Maintenance Margin) / Position Size
In cross margin mode, your entire wallet balance replaces the isolated margin in the formula, providing a larger buffer against liquidation but exposing your full balance to risk. The maintenance margin is calculated as the position value multiplied by the maintenance margin rate, which is typically 0.5% on most exchanges.
As an example, if you open a long position at $50,000 with 10x leverage and a 0.5% maintenance margin rate, your isolated margin is $5,000 and your maintenance margin is $250. The liquidation price would be $50,000 - ($5,000 - $250) / 1 = $45,250. This gives you a 9.5% buffer before liquidation occurs.
Isolated vs Cross Margin Explained
Isolated margin dedicates a specific amount of margin to each position independently. If one position is liquidated, only the margin assigned to that position is lost. Your remaining account balance and other positions are completely unaffected. This makes isolated margin the preferred choice for traders who want predictable, bounded risk on each trade.
Cross margin uses your entire available account balance as collateral shared across all open positions. This has the advantage of lowering your liquidation price for each position because more capital backs them. However, the downside is significant: if a single position is liquidated, it can consume your entire account balance, including unrealized profits from other positions.
For most traders, isolated margin is the safer option. It forces you to explicitly decide how much capital to risk on each trade, which is a fundamental principle of sound risk management. Cross margin can be useful for experienced traders running hedged or market-neutral strategies where multiple positions offset each other's risk.
How to Avoid Getting Liquidated
The most effective way to avoid liquidation is to use lower leverage. With 2x leverage, the market needs to move 50% against you to trigger liquidation. With 100x leverage, a mere 1% adverse move can wipe you out. Choosing an appropriate leverage level that gives your trade room to breathe is the single most impactful decision you can make.
Always set stop-loss orders at a price well above your liquidation level for long positions, or below it for shorts. A stop-loss exits your trade at a controlled loss before the exchange needs to step in with a forced liquidation. The gap between your stop-loss and liquidation price serves as a safety buffer against slippage and sudden price spikes.
Monitor your margin ratio continuously, especially during periods of high volatility. If your margin ratio climbs above 80%, consider reducing your position size or adding more margin. Some exchanges offer auto-deposit features that transfer funds from your spot wallet to your margin account when your ratio reaches a certain threshold.
Finally, size your positions appropriately using the position size calculator. A common rule is to never risk more than 1% to 2% of your total account on a single trade. This ensures that even a string of losing trades will not significantly draw down your capital, giving you the staying power to remain in the market and recover.