Crypto Margin Calculator
Compute required margin, leverage, or max position size—make exposure constraints visible before execution.
Open calculator →Built for clarity under real trading conditions. These tools help you model position size, margin needs, liquidation distance, slippage impact, and trading fees—so you can understand constraints before execution.
Every calculator is designed around how traders plan and execute: entry, size, margin, fees, and thresholds—with outputs that make constraints explicit.
Models real-world friction—slippage, spreads, and fee drag—so expectations match how orders fill and costs accumulate.
Standard market formulas with plainly stated assumptions—no black boxes, no hidden logic.
Works across exchanges. You control leverage, fees, and sizing variables to match your venue and market.
Compute required margin, leverage, or max position size—make exposure constraints visible before execution.
Open calculator →Estimate execution drift & dollar impact before the order—reduce surprises in thin or fast markets.
Open calculator →Turn account size and stop distance into exact position size—standardize exposure per trade.
Open calculator →Price maker/taker fees and rebates upfront—see cost drag across scalps, day trades, and swings.
Open calculator →Find the price where your position becomes vulnerable—see how leverage and margin interact with thresholds.
Open calculator →Quantify bid-ask costs by trade size—surface hidden friction that quietly erodes outcomes.
Open calculator →Map target levels from entry and position structure—clarify payoff scenarios before execution.
Open calculator →Calculate stop distance from risk % and entry—standardize downside assumptions before placing orders.
Open calculator →Map payoff for calls/puts by strike, premium, expiry—see scenario mechanics clearly before committing.
Open calculator →Estimate funding costs (or credits) over time—price the true carry of a futures position.
Open calculator →Quantify reward vs risk from entry, stop, and target—validate whether assumptions meet your minimum R multiple.
Open calculator →