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Margin Call Calculator

Quickly compute margin call with accurate formulas. See amortization schedules, growth projections, and side-by-side comparisons.

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Formula

Margin Level = (Equity / Used Margin) x 100%; Equity = Balance + Floating P/L

Margin level expresses equity as a percentage of required margin. When margin level drops to the margin call threshold (typically 100%), additional funds are required. At the stop-out level (typically 20-50%), positions are automatically liquidated. Required margin = Position Size / Leverage.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Standard Forex Margin Call Scenario

Problem: A trader has $10,000 balance, opens a 1 standard lot (100,000 units) long EUR/USD at 1.1000 with 100:1 leverage. Margin call at 100%, stop-out at 50%. Current price is 1.0950. What is the margin status?

Solution: Required margin = 100,000 / 100 = $1,000\nFloating P/L = (1.0950 - 1.1000) x 100,000 = -$500\nEquity = $10,000 + (-$500) = $9,500\nMargin level = ($9,500 / $1,000) x 100 = 950%\nFree margin = $9,500 - $1,000 = $8,500\nMargin call price = 1.1000 - ($10,000 - $1,000) / 100,000 = 1.0100\nStop-out price = 1.1000 - ($10,000 - $500) / 100,000 = 1.0050

Result: Margin Level: 950% (Healthy) | MC Price: 1.01000 | SO Price: 1.00500 | 900 pips to MC

Example 2: Over-Leveraged Position

Problem: A trader with $5,000 opens 3 standard lots (300,000 units) long at 1.1000 with 200:1 leverage. How close is the margin call?

Solution: Required margin = 300,000 / 200 = $1,500\nPip value = 300,000 x 0.0001 = $30/pip\nFree margin = $5,000 - $1,500 = $3,500\nPips to margin call = $3,500 / $30 = 116.7 pips\nMargin call price = 1.1000 - 0.01167 = 1.08833\nThis is extremely risky โ€” only 116 pips of room

Result: Margin Level: 333% | Only 116 pips to margin call | Extremely high risk position

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a margin call in forex trading and when does it happen?

A margin call occurs when a trader's account equity falls below the required margin level set by their broker, typically expressed as a percentage. When you open a leveraged position, the broker sets aside a portion of your account as margin collateral. As the market moves against your position and unrealized losses accumulate, your equity decreases while the required margin remains constant. When the ratio of equity to required margin falls below the margin call level, usually 100 percent, the broker issues a margin call notification demanding that you either deposit additional funds, close losing positions, or reduce position size. If you fail to act and equity continues to decline to the stop-out level, typically 20 to 50 percent, the broker will automatically begin closing your positions starting with the largest loss to prevent further account deterioration and protect against negative balance.

How is margin level calculated and what do the percentages mean?

Margin level is calculated as equity divided by used margin, multiplied by 100 to express it as a percentage. Equity equals your account balance plus or minus all floating profits and losses from open positions. Used margin is the total amount of margin locked up as collateral for all open positions. A margin level of 500 percent means your equity is five times greater than the required margin, indicating a comfortable cushion. A margin level of 200 percent means equity is twice the required margin. At 100 percent, equity exactly equals required margin and no free margin remains, which is the typical margin call trigger. Below 100 percent, you are effectively trading on borrowed margin beyond your equity, and at the stop-out level, typically 20 to 50 percent, automatic liquidation begins. Higher margin levels indicate safer positions with more room to absorb adverse price movements.

How does leverage affect the margin call price level?

Higher leverage magnifies both potential profits and the risk of margin calls because it allows you to control larger positions with less margin. With 100:1 leverage, a $10,000 account can control a $1,000,000 position requiring only $10,000 in margin, leaving virtually no free margin to absorb losses. A mere 50-pip move against your position would result in a $5,000 loss, cutting your equity in half. With 10:1 leverage, the same account controls only $100,000, requiring $10,000 margin but the same 50-pip move causes only a $500 loss. The lower the leverage, the more pips the price can move against you before triggering a margin call. Professional traders typically use effective leverage of 5:1 to 20:1 rather than the maximum offered by brokers. Understanding the relationship between leverage, position size, and available margin is essential for survival in forex trading.

What is the difference between margin call level and stop-out level?

The margin call level and stop-out level are two distinct thresholds in leveraged trading that serve different purposes. The margin call level, typically set at 100 percent margin level, is a warning threshold where the broker notifies you that your equity is dangerously low relative to your margin requirements. At this point, you still have the opportunity to add funds or close positions voluntarily. The stop-out level, typically set between 20 and 50 percent depending on the broker and jurisdiction, is the forced liquidation threshold where the broker automatically begins closing your open positions to prevent your account from going into negative balance. The broker closes positions starting with the largest losing trade and continues until the margin level recovers above the stop-out threshold. These levels vary significantly between brokers, so always verify your specific broker's margin call and stop-out policies before trading.

What is the difference between markup and margin?

Markup is the percentage added to cost to get the selling price: Markup = (Price - Cost) / Cost. Margin is the percentage of the selling price that is profit: Margin = (Price - Cost) / Price. A 50% markup on a 10 dollar item sets the price at 15 dollars, but the margin is 33.3%. Margin is always lower than markup for the same product.

What is contribution margin and how is it used?

Contribution margin is revenue minus variable costs, showing how much each unit contributes to covering fixed costs and profit. CM Ratio = (Revenue - Variable Costs) / Revenue. Use it for break-even analysis, pricing decisions, and product mix optimization. Products with higher contribution margins should generally receive more resources.

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