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Measured data · Exness calculator

Exness calculator: margin, pip value, spread cost, swaps

Pick an instrument, a volume in lots, and a leverage ratio — the panel returns the required margin, the value of one pip, the cost of crossing the spread, the position size, and both overnight swaps. Every figure is computed from spreads and contract specifications taken from Exness's own MT5 (Standard) feed — values read from the trading terminal, not copied from a price list; the date of the snapshot in use is shown under the panel.

Trading calculator

Exness trading calculator on measured specs

Volume is entered in lots — a lot is a standard trade size; on forex pairs one lot is 100,000 units of the base currency. That makes the panel a lot size calculator in reverse: adjust the volume until the margin and the pip value fit the account. The list holds 23 measured instruments — forex majors and crosses, gold and silver, oil, BTC/USD and ETH/USD, and equity index CFDs (contracts that track an asset's price without owning the asset).

Trading calculator Measured 2026-07-10
Required margin
Pip value
Spread cost (measured)
Position size (notional)
Swap long / night
Swap short / night

Margin — the deposit set aside to keep a position open; position size divided by leverage. Pip — the standard step a price move is quoted in; 0.0001 on EUR/USD. Spread — the gap between the buy and sell price; on Standard accounts the brokerage charge sits inside it. Notional — the full market value a position controls. Swap — the fee (or credit) for holding a position past the daily rollover, shown per night. Leverage — the ratio between the notional and the margin behind it; it multiplies losses exactly as it multiplies gains.

Calculations use spreads and contract specs from Exness's own MT5 (Standard) feed, measured in the trading terminal (2026-07-10). Figures are indicative — spreads may fluctuate and actual results will vary.

Worked example

How much is 0.01 lot on EUR/USD?

On a USD account, 0.01 lot of EUR/USD is 1,000 units of the base currency — a position of about $1,143 at the measured mid rate of 1.14349. At 1:200 leverage it needs about $5.72 of margin, one pip is worth about $0.10, and crossing the measured 0.8-pip spread costs about $0.08.

Read as a profit calculator, the same numbers reverse: a 10-pip move in the trade's favour on 0.01 lot is about $1.00 gross; the measured spread takes $0.08 of it, leaving about $0.92 before any commission or overnight swap. A 10-pip move against the trade costs the same $1.00 — leverage multiplies losses exactly as it multiplies gains.

Figures are indicative, from spreads and contract specs from Exness's own MT5 (Standard) feed (2026-07-09). In another deposit currency the same amounts convert at the current exchange rate, which changes through the day. Trading is risky and may not be suitable for everyone.

Behind the inputs

Leverage and account type shape the result

The leverage field is the account's own setting

Margin here defaults to 1:200, and the field is editable. On a real account, each trading account carries its own leverage setting, changed in the Personal Area; the maximum available depends on the instrument, the region, and the funds in the account. Leverage in detail →

Trading is risky and may not be suitable for everyone.

Spread cost assumes Standard pricing

The feed behind this page is measured on a Standard account, where pricing is spread-only. Used as a brokerage calculator, the spread-cost line shows the broker's charge: on Standard it sits inside the spread. Pro is commission-free with its own pricing; Raw Spread and Zero pair raw or zero spreads with a commission per lot — so the same line reads differently by account type. Account types in detail →

Looking for a platform rather than a number? Back to the platform matrix →

Quick answers

Calculator questions

What leverage does the calculator assume?

Margin defaults to 1:200 and the leverage field is editable, so the figure can match the account's own setting. Margin equals position size divided by leverage. The maximum available leverage depends on the instrument, the region, and the funds in the account; each trading account has its own setting, changed in the Personal Area.

Can the results be shown in a local currency?

The calculator works in USD, the deposit currency of the example. A result in any other deposit currency is the USD amount converted at the current exchange rate — that rate moves through the day, so any converted figure is indicative.

Where do the numbers come from?

Spreads and contract specifications come from Exness's own MT5 (Standard) feed, measured in the trading terminal — the panel header shows the date of the snapshot in use. The values are read from the terminal, not copied from a price list.

Why does the result differ from the trading terminal?

Spreads fluctuate from second to second and widen around news and market open or close, and swap rates are updated by the broker. A daily snapshot can only be indicative — the quote in the terminal at the moment an order is placed is the figure that counts.

From calculation to the official door

The panel shows what a position costs; opening one happens on the official Exness website. Creating the account takes a few minutes — email and a short questionnaire, then identity verification in the Personal Area, where the leverage setting also lives. Full registration walkthrough →

Open Exness Account

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