Let’s walk through a simple example to make it very concrete:
Step 1: Determine your account size.
Example: account size = $10,000.
Step 2: Choose your risk per trade.
Suppose you decide to risk 1% of the account. 1% of $10,000 = $100.
Step 3: Identify your trade setup and define stop loss pips.
Example: You’re trading EUR/USD. Entry at 1.1200, stop loss at 1.1150 → risk is 50 pips.
Step 4: Calculate position size.
First, determine your pip-value in USD per lot. For EUR/USD one standard lot (100,000 units) is about $10 per pip (roughly speaking, and assuming USD as account currency).
So if one lot = $10 per pip, and your risk is 50 pips → risk per lot = $10 × 50 = $500.
But you only want to risk $100. So you compute: number of lots = $100 ÷ ($10 × 50) = $100 ÷ $500 = 0.2 lots (i.e., 20,000 units).
Thus, you should trade 0.2 lots so that if the stop loss hits, you lose approximately $100 (your predefined 1%).