Free Margin is the amount of equity in a forex trading account that is NOT being used as margin for existing open trades. It determines how much capital is available to open new positions or sustain floating losses before receiving a margin call.
How is Free Margin Calculated?
π Formula:
πΉ Free Margin = Equity – Used Margin
πΉ Equity = Account Balance + Floating P/L
π Key Takeaways:
βοΈ Higher floating profits = More Free Margin
βοΈ Higher floating losses = Less Free Margin
βοΈ No open trades = Free Margin = Equity
Example 1: No Open Trades
πΉ You deposit $1,000 in your account but have no open trades.
βοΈ Equity = $1,000
βοΈ Used Margin = $0
βοΈ Free Margin = $1,000 – $0 = $1,000
π With no open trades, Free Margin is the same as your Balance & Equity.
Example 2: Open a USD/JPY Trade
πΉ You open a long USD/JPY position of 1 mini lot (10,000 units).
πΉ The Margin Requirement is 4%.
Step 1: Calculate Required Margin
πΈ Notional Value = $10,000
πΈ Required Margin = $10,000 x 4% = $400
Step 2: Calculate Used Margin
πΈ Used Margin = $400 (since only one trade is open).
Step 3: Calculate Equity
πΉ If the trade is at breakeven (Floating P/L = $0):
βοΈ Equity = Balance + Floating P/L
βοΈ $1,000 = $1,000 + $0
Step 4: Calculate Free Margin
βοΈ Free Margin = Equity – Used Margin
βοΈ $600 = $1,000 – $400
π Since $400 is locked as margin, only $600 is available for new trades.
Why is Free Margin Important?
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Determines if you can open new trades β More free margin = more trading opportunities.
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Helps avoid margin calls β If Free Margin drops too low, the broker may liquidate trades.
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Indicates account health β A low Free Margin means high risk exposure.
Final Thoughts
βοΈ Monitor your Free Margin β If it gets too low, you risk a margin call.
βοΈ Equity fluctuates with open trades, impacting Free Margin.
βοΈ Keep a Free Margin buffer to avoid forced liquidation.
Now that you understand Free Margin, next, weβll discuss Margin Level and why itβs crucial for risk management in forex trading! π