
A forex margin calculator works out how much margin you need to open a trade.
You take the position value and divide it by your leverage.
For example, a $235,000 gold position at 1:500 leverage needs $470 in margin.
But knowing the margin is only half the story — the part that actually keeps you safe is your buffer before a margin call.
Work out the margin you need to open a trade. But this calculator does something others do not: it shows your safety buffer — how far the price can move against you before a margin call or stop-out.
For illustration only. Uses indicative prices and PU Prime’s standard 100% margin-call and 50% stop-out levels; your live values may differ. Leverage increases both profits and losses. Trading CFDs carries a high risk of rapid loss. PU Prime is regulated by the FSA (Seychelles, SD050) and ASIC (410681).
Use the free calculator above to find your required margin for any pair, gold, or index.
Then read on, because this calculator does something no other one does: it tells you exactly how far the market can move against you before you get a margin call or a stop-out.
Key Overviews
Margin is the amount of money your broker sets aside from your account to keep a leveraged trade open.
It is not a cost or a fee — it is more like a security deposit. When you close the trade, the margin is released back to you.
Because forex is traded with leverage, you do not need the full value of a position to open it.
A leverage of 1:500 means you only need to put up 1/500 of the position’s value.
That is why a small account can control a large trade.

The trade-off is risk. The same leverage that lets you open a large position with a small deposit also magnifies losses.
This is why understanding your margin and leverage properly is one of the most important things a new trader can learn.
The formula is simple: Required margin = (position value) ÷ (leverage).
To find the position value, multiply the current price by the contract size by your trade size in lots.
For a standard lot of EUR/USD at 1.0850, that is 1.0850 × 100,000 × 1 = $108,500. At 1:500 leverage, the required margin is $108,500 ÷ 500 = $217.
Gold works a little differently because the contract size is 100 ounces. One lot of gold at $2,350 is a $235,000 position, so at 1:500 the margin is $470.
The calculator above handles all of this automatically — you just pick your instrument, lot size, and leverage.
Here is the question every trader actually worries about, and the one most calculators ignore: how far can the price move against me before I lose this trade?
This is where the margin level comes in.
Your margin level is your account equity divided by your margin, expressed as a percentage.
As a losing trade erodes your equity, your margin falls.
Two things happen on the way down.

At 50% margin level, you hit a margin call. Your broker warns you that your account is running low, and you cannot open new trades.
At 20% margin level on PU Prime, you hit the stop-out level, and the broker automatically closes your positions to stop your account from going negative.
The safety buffer is the dollar amount your account can lose before these levels are reached.
The calculator above shows you both numbers: how much loss it takes you to a margin call, and how much it takes you to a stop-out.
If those numbers look small compared to a normal price swing in your instrument, your position is too big — and the calculator will tell you so directly.
It is tempting to use the highest leverage available because it lowers your required margin. But there is a hidden cost: leverage and your safety buffer are linked.
With higher leverage, you tie up less margin, which sounds good. But it also tempts traders to open much larger positions.
A larger position loses money faster when the market moves against it, which eats your equity — and your margin level — more quickly. The result is a thinner buffer and a faster route to a stop-out.
The disciplined approach is to use leverage to free up capital, not to maximize position size.
Keep your position sized to your account, set a stop-loss on every trade, and use the calculator to check that your buffer is comfortable before you enter.
A forex margin calculator works out how much margin you need to open a trade, based on the instrument, trade size, and leverage. A good one also shows your safety buffer: how far the market can move against you before a margin call or stop-out.
The required margin equals the position value divided by your leverage. The position value is the price multiplied by the contract size multiplied by your lot size. For example, a $108,500 EUR/USD position at 1:500 leverage requires $217 in margin.
Used margin is the amount tied up in your open trades. Free margin is the equity you have left over that can absorb losses or open new trades. Free margin equals your equity minus your used margin.
A margin call happens when your margin level falls to 50%, meaning your equity has dropped to the same value as your used margin. Your broker warns you, and you cannot open new positions. If losses continue, a stop-out will be triggered.
PU Prime’s stop-out level is 20%. If your margin level falls to 50%, the platform automatically closes your open positions, starting with the largest losing one, to protect your account from going negative. The margin-call warning comes earlier, at 50%.
Leverage is the ratio of your position value to the margin required. If a $100,000 position needs $1,000 of margin, your leverage is 100:1. Put another way, leverage equals position value divided by the margin you put up.
Yes. Higher leverage lowers your required margin, but it tempts traders into larger positions and shrinks the safety buffer before a stop-out. The leverage itself is a tool; the risk comes from oversizing positions because it is available.
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