How to Trade Forex
Forex trading means buying one currency while simultaneously selling another through a broker's platform — no physical exchange of banknotes. This guide covers every step: choosing a broker, opening an account, setting up MT4/MT5, placing your first trade, and avoiding the mistakes most beginners make.
Key Takeaways
- To start trading forex, you need a broker account, a platform, and a trading plan.
- Currency pairs move in pips — your profit or loss depends on pips × pip value.
- Demo trading lets you practice order types and strategy without risking real money.
- Always define your risk before entering — set a stop-loss with every trade.
Step 1 — What You Are Actually Trading
When you trade forex, you are trading currency pairs. A pair like EUR/USD shows the exchange rate between the euro and the US dollar. The first currency (EUR) is the base currency; the second (USD) is the quote currency.
If EUR/USD = 1.1050, it means 1 euro buys 1.1050 US dollars.
- Buying EUR/USD (going long) means you expect the euro to strengthen against the dollar — price rises
- Selling EUR/USD (going short) means you expect the euro to weaken — price falls
You never take physical delivery of the currencies. All forex trades settle in your account currency (usually USD) as floating profit or loss. See: How to Read Forex Quotes.
Step 2 — Choose a Forex Broker
Your broker is the intermediary between you and the interbank forex market. Key factors to evaluate:
Step 3 — Open and Verify Your Account
Account opening is completed online in 15–30 minutes:
- Fill in personal details (name, address, email)
- Answer questions about trading experience and financial status (required by most regulated brokers)
- Upload identity verification documents (passport or national ID, and proof of address)
- Wait for approval — usually same day or 1–2 business days
- Make your initial deposit
Most brokers let you open a demo account immediately without deposit or verification — useful while waiting for live account approval.
Step 4 — Set Up MT4 or MT5
MetaTrader 4 (MT4) and MetaTrader 5 (MT5) are the industry-standard forex trading platforms. Both are free and available as desktop (Windows/Mac), mobile (iOS/Android), and web browser versions.
After download and login with your broker’s server address, account number, and password:
Step 5 — Practice on a Demo Account
Trade demo for a minimum of 2–4 weeks before using real money. Use the same lot sizes you plan to use live — not larger just because the money is virtual. If you cannot follow your plan on demo, you will not follow it live.
Practice these specific skills on demo:
- Placing market orders (instant execution at current price)
- Placing pending orders (limit and stop entries)
- Setting stop-loss and take-profit on every trade — no exceptions
- Modifying and closing positions manually
- Watching how floating P&L moves with price
- Seeing what happens when a stop-loss triggers
Step 6 — Understand the Order Types
There are two main categories of orders: market orders (immediate execution) and pending orders (execute only when price reaches a specified level). The four pending order types are:
| Order Type | Placed | Executes When | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buy Limit | Below current price | Price drops to your level | Expecting a dip before a rise |
| Sell Limit | Above current price | Price rises to your level | Expecting a rise before a fall |
| Buy Stop | Above current price | Price breaks upward to your level | Expecting a breakout to the upside |
| Sell Stop | Below current price | Price breaks downward to your level | Expecting a breakout to the downside |
Pending orders are useful when you cannot watch the screen continuously. They execute automatically when price reaches your level, including your pre-set stop-loss and take-profit.
Step 7 — Place Your First Trade
Using a micro lot (0.01) on EUR/USD (pip value = $0.10/pip), the complete MT4/MT5 trade entry process:
- Press F9 (or right-click chart → Trade → New Order)
- Select instrument: EUR/USD
- Set Volume: 0.01 (micro lot)
- Set Stop Loss: the price where you exit if wrong (e.g., 20 pips below entry for a buy = −$2.00 max loss)
- Set Take Profit: your target (e.g., 40 pips above entry = +$4.00 target)
- Choose Buy or Sell (Market Execution)
- Confirm the order
- Lot size: 0.01 micro lot | Pip value: $0.10/pip
- Entry: 1.10500
- Stop-loss: 1.10300 (20 pips below) → max loss: 20 × $0.10 = $2.00
- Take-profit: 1.10900 (40 pips above) → target: 40 × $0.10 = $4.00
- Risk/Reward: $2.00 : $4.00 = 1:2
Step 8 — Manage and Close the Trade
Once open, the trade appears in the Terminal (Trade tab). The floating P&L column updates in real time. You can:
- Modify the stop-loss or take-profit (right-click the trade → Modify Order)
- Partially close — close a portion of the position to lock in partial profit
- Close fully — right-click the trade → Close Order, or click the × icon
The trade closes automatically if price hits your stop-loss or take-profit.
Before Going Live — Checklist
Placing trades is simple. Understanding what to trade, when to trade, and how to size positions is the hard part. Before depositing real money, confirm you can answer all of these:
- What is my edge? — A specific, testable reason why I expect this trade to work
- How much will I risk per trade? — Maximum 1–2% of account equity. On $500: $5–$10
- Where is my stop-loss? — Decided before entry, not after
- What is my risk/reward? — At least 1:1.5 minimum before taking any trade
- How will I record trades? — A trade journal is required to identify what works
Common Beginner Mistakes
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Forex Basics Guides
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