Free Crypto Trading Calculators

Position size, P&L, leverage risk, exchange fees, percentage recovery & buyback break-even — six risk-first tools for disciplined traders

How this works ↓
📊 Spot — you own the coins
⚡ Leverage — margin / futures

⚡ How's your leverage trade right now? Enter your stake, entry, exit (or current) price and leverage to see your real profit or loss — after fees and leverage. Leave leverage at 1 to check a spot trade instead.

💰 Trade Parameters

💡 How to use:

Enter your stake, entry price and exit (or current) price, then set your leverage. Choose a fee preset for realistic numbers. This shows your net P&L after fees and leverage — and how many tokens you actually bought.

Use it to check an open leverage trade at any price, or leave leverage at 1 to compare exchanges and fee tiers on a spot trade.

📊 Trade Result

Enter your trade details and click Calculate to see results

⚡ Risk-first leverage planner. Tell it your equity, your risk %, your entry and your stop — it sizes the position so your loss stays fixed at any leverage, and shows margin, liquidation, R:R and ROE the way an exchange does.

⚡ Trade Setup

% below entry (long) or above entry (short)
Leave blank to skip R:R and profit
Charged on full position size, not margin — they bite harder at high leverage

📊 Trade Plan

Enter your equity, entry price and stop loss to see your full trade plan

🪙 Already holding a coin? See whether you're in profit or loss right now — after fees — so you can decide if it's worth holding on, or cutting a small loss and moving on. This is a spot holding check, not a leverage trade.

🪙 Your Holding

💡 How to use:

Enter how many tokens you hold, the average price you paid, and the current market price. Turn on a fee preset to see your profit/loss after exit fees — useful when you're deciding whether selling at a small loss actually leaves you worse off once fees are paid.

Tip: Made multiple buys at different prices? Get your average by dividing the total amount spent by the total tokens acquired.

📊 Holdings P&L

Enter your position details and click Calculate to see results


💱 How this works: Enter your sell price, quantity and fees. Add your average buy price and it also shows your realised loss on the sale and the exact price to buy back and recover it. The P&L curve shows your break-even point and how your profit grows as price drops further. The table auto-generates at sensible intervals — use the slider to extend the range, or pin a specific price target.

💱 Sell Details

Your original cost basis. Fill this in to see your realised loss on the sale and the exact price to buy back and recover it.

Used for display only — pure maths, no price fetching

FEES

Sell and buy fees are applied separately — they can differ (e.g. taker vs maker)

ANALYSIS RANGE
Show drops up to 30%
5% — tight range 30% — standard 80% — bear market
PIN A TARGET

Pins a highlighted row in the table at your exact target — enter either field

💡 The core question:

After sell fees you hold net cash. To break even you must rebuy your full quantity and cover buy fees — so price must drop enough to offset both. Everything to the right of the 🔵 break-even line is the profit zone — where you end up with more asset than you started with. On low-fee exchanges the break-even line sits very close to 0%, so almost the entire chart is green.

If you add your average buy price, the 🎯 recovery price goes a step further: it's the rebuy price where the surplus cash exactly offsets the loss you took on the sale — so you get your full quantity back and end up square against your original cost.

📊 Buyback Analysis

Enter sell price and quantity to see results

📉 How this works: Enter your existing position and one or more planned buy orders. The calculator shows your new average entry price after each buy, how far price needs to move to break even, and the P&L at any target price — so you can stress-test your DCA plan before executing it.

📉 DCA Position Builder

EXISTING POSITION

Leave blank if building a fresh position from scratch

PLANNED BUY ORDERS
TARGETS & CURRENT PRICE

💡 DCA logic:

New average = total cost ÷ total quantity. Each buy lowers your average only if it's below your current average. Buying above your average raises it. The table shows exactly how each order moves the needle.

📊 DCA Analysis

Enter your position details to see your DCA analysis

Five Free Crypto Trading Calculators — What Each One Does

These tools are built around one principle: every trade should have a defined maximum loss before you enter. They're split into two groups — Spot tools for coins you actually own, and Leverage tools for margin and futures — so it's always clear which one fits your situation.

Spot Calculators — you own the coins

🪙 Holdings P&L

Already holding a coin? Enter how many tokens you own, your average buy price, and the current market price to see whether you're in profit or loss right now — after optional exchange fees. The quick acid test for deciding whether to keep holding or cut a small loss. Supports GBP, USD and EUR display.

💱 Buyback / Recovery

Selling and planning to buy back lower? Enter your sell price, quantity, average buy price and fees to see the exact rebuy price that recovers your loss, plus your break-even after fees. A visual P&L curve shows how the gain grows as price drops, with a full table of targets and how much extra quantity you accumulate at each level.

📉 DCA Average Price

Buying into a falling position? Enter your existing holdings and one or more planned buy orders to see your new weighted-average entry after each buy, how far each order moves your average, your break-even price, and the P&L at any target. Supports dollar-amount or quantity inputs per order.

Leverage Calculators — margin / futures

⚡ Leverage Trade Planner

Plan and size a leverage trade before you enter. Set your account equity, risk percentage, entry and stop loss (by % or ATR) — it outputs the correct position size to keep your loss fixed, plus your liquidation price, suggested maximum safe leverage, margin required and risk:reward. Warns you when your leverage is too high for your stop distance.

💰 Trade Result

Check a leverage trade's profit or loss while you're in it, or after the fact. Enter your stake, entry, exit (or current) price, leverage and fees to see net P&L after fees and leverage, and how many tokens you bought. Includes maker/taker presets for 11 exchanges. Leave leverage at 1 to check a spot trade instead.

How to Use These Calculators Together

The most effective workflow starts with market context. Check the Crypto Markets dashboard or Market Regime Filter to understand whether conditions favour aggressive or defensive positioning. For a leveraged trade, open the Leverage Trade Planner — set your account size, maximum risk per trade (1–2% for most traders), your stop loss and leverage. It outputs the exact position size that keeps your maximum loss fixed regardless of what price does, and shows your liquidation price and maximum safe leverage.

Once you're in a trade, use Trade Result to see your real net P&L after fees and leverage at any price. For coins you already own outright, Holdings P&L is the quick profit/loss check. If you're considering selling and buying back lower, the Buyback / Recovery calculator tells you the exact rebuy price that recovers your loss after fees — usually further down than traders expect.

Tip: Start with market context, use the Leverage Trade Planner to fix your risk before entry, check live P&L with Trade Result, and use Buyback / Recovery before selling a position you plan to re-enter lower.

Common Questions About Crypto Trading Calculators

How do I calculate position size for a crypto trade?
The formula is: Position Size = (Account Size × Risk %) ÷ Stop Loss %. For example, a £10,000 account risking 1% with a 3% stop loss gives a position size of £3,333. With 2x leverage that becomes a £6,666 position using £3,333 margin. The Leverage Trade Planner does this automatically — enter your equity, risk percentage, stop loss and leverage to get the correct size instantly, along with your liquidation price and maximum safe leverage.
What percentage of my account should I risk per trade?
Professional traders typically risk 0.5%–2% per trade. At 1% risk, you can absorb 100 consecutive losses before wiping your account — enough runway to learn and adjust. Risking more than 2% is considered aggressive; more than 5% per trade will eventually cause severe drawdowns even with a strong win rate. The Leverage Trade Planner enforces your chosen percentage automatically, removing the temptation to oversize high-conviction trades.
What is a good risk:reward ratio for crypto trading?
A minimum of 2:1 means your target profit is at least twice your maximum loss. At 3:1, you only need to win 25% of trades to break even mathematically. Most professional traders target 2:1 to 5:1 depending on strategy and win rate. A single 5:1 winner at 1% risk cancels five full losses. The Leverage Trade Planner displays your R:R ratio in real time as you adjust your stop loss and take profit.
How much do exchange fees affect crypto profits?
Fees are charged on both entry (maker) and exit (taker). On Binance at 0.10% each way, a £1,000 trade costs £2 in fees. On Coinbase at 0.50%/0.60%, the same trade costs £11. For short-term trading or small price moves, fees can turn a nominal winner into a net loss. The Trade Result calculator shows exact net profit after fees with presets for all 11 major exchanges. The Buyback / Recovery calculator applies fees to both the sell and the rebuy separately, since they can differ.
Why do you need a bigger gain to recover from a loss?
After a loss you are working from a smaller base. A 50% loss on £10,000 leaves £5,000 — a 50% gain on £5,000 only returns £7,500. You need a 100% gain to recover a 50% loss. A 25% loss requires a 33% gain. A 10% loss needs an 11% gain. This asymmetry is why cutting losses quickly is mathematically more powerful than letting winners run.
What is liquidation price on a leveraged crypto trade?
Liquidation price is where your exchange forcibly closes your position because losses have consumed your entire margin. At 10x leverage on a long, roughly a 10% price drop triggers liquidation. At 20x leverage, only a 5% adverse move is enough. Always place a stop loss well above the liquidation price (for longs) so you exit on your terms before forced closure. The Leverage Trade Planner shows your liquidation price and warns you if your leverage is dangerously high for your stop distance.
How do I know if selling and buying back lower is actually profitable?
Most traders underestimate how far price needs to drop before a sell-and-rebuy manoeuvre is profitable after fees. On Binance at 0.10% each way, price must drop at least 0.20% just to break even — you haven't made anything yet. On Coinbase at 0.50%/0.60%, the break-even drop is over 1.10%. The Buyback Calculator shows the exact break-even price, a P&L curve across the full drop range, and how much additional quantity you accumulate at any target price — so you can judge whether the move is worth the execution risk.