What Is a Pip in Forex Trading?
A pip is the standard unit for measuring price movement in the forex market. Every profit, every loss, every spread — they are all expressed in pips. Before you can calculate anything meaningful about a trade, you need to understand what a pip is and how much it is worth in your account currency.
Key Takeaways
- A pip is the fourth decimal digit (0.0001) on most currency pairs.
- JPY pairs use 0.01 as one pip, not 0.0001.
- Pip value depends on the currency pair, lot size, and account currency.
- EUR/USD standard-lot pip value is exactly $10 in a USD account.
What Is a Pip? Definition and Meaning
Pip stands for percentage in point (sometimes called price interest point). In practice, it is a one-unit move at the fourth decimal place of a currency pair’s exchange rate.
If EUR/USD moves from 1.10500 to 1.10510, the price moved 1 pip (the digit at the fourth decimal changed by 1).
Most currency pairs are quoted to four decimal places, so 1 pip = 0.0001.
Japanese yen pairs are the exception. USD/JPY and other JPY-cross pairs trade at two decimal places (e.g., 149.50). One pip on USD/JPY = 0.01 — the second decimal, not the fourth. The yen trades at a naturally lower unit value, so two decimal places give appropriately readable numbers.
How Pips Work in a Real Trade
Pip movement just counts the distance price travelled. It does not tell you the dollar amount — for that you need pip value, explained in the next section.
You buy EUR/USD at 1.10500. Price rises to 1.10600.
The fourth decimal moved from 5 to 6 — but there are 10 digits of movement (0.00100 ÷ 0.0001 = 10 pips).
You gained 10 pips.
You buy USD/JPY at 149.50. Price rises to 149.80.
The second decimal moved 30 digits (0.30 ÷ 0.01 = 30 pips).
You gained 30 pips.
Pips measure direction and distance. They say nothing about how much money moved. A 30-pip move on EUR/USD with a micro lot earns $3, while the same 30 pips with a standard lot earns $300. That difference comes from pip value.
What Is a Pipette?
A pipette is one-tenth of a pip — the fifth decimal place on non-JPY pairs, or the third decimal place on JPY pairs. Most modern brokers, including FXGlory, quote prices to five decimal places.
EUR/USD at 1.10503 — the “3” at position five is a pipette (0.3 pips).
USD/JPY at 149.503 — the “3” at position three is a pipette.
For most calculations, read only the first four decimals (EUR/USD) or first two decimals (JPY pairs). Pipettes let brokers quote tighter spreads; they do not change how pip value is calculated.
How to Calculate Pip Value
Pip value answers the practical question: “How much does each pip earn or cost me?” It depends on three things: the currency pair, the lot size, and your account currency.
EUR/USD with a USD account
When USD is the quote currency (the second currency in the pair) and your account is in USD, the pip value calculation is direct:
Pip value (USD) = Lot size in units × Pip size= 100,000 × 0.0001 = $10.00 per pip (standard lot)
= 10,000 × 0.0001 = $1.00 per pip (mini lot)
= 1,000 × 0.0001 = $0.10 per pip (micro lot)
These values are exact and do not change as EUR/USD moves, because the pip is already denominated in USD (the quote currency).
USD/JPY with a USD account
When USD is the base currency (the first currency), the pip is denominated in the quote currency (JPY), and you must convert to USD:
Pip value (JPY) = Lot size × Pip size= 100,000 × 0.01 = 1,000 JPY per pip
Pip value (USD) = 1,000 JPY ÷ USD/JPY rateAt 149.50: 1,000 ÷ 149.50 ≈ $6.69 per pip
This value changes slightly as USD/JPY moves. At a different rate the USD pip value will differ.
Pip value reference table
| Currency Pair | Standard Lot (100,000) | Mini Lot (10,000) | Micro Lot (1,000) | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EUR/USD | $10.00 | $1.00 | $0.10 | Exact. USD is quote currency. |
| GBP/USD | $10.00 | $1.00 | $0.10 | Exact. USD is quote currency. |
| AUD/USD | $10.00 | $1.00 | $0.10 | Exact. USD is quote currency. |
| NZD/USD | $10.00 | $1.00 | $0.10 | Exact. USD is quote currency. |
| USD/JPY | ~$6.69 | ~$0.67 | ~$0.07 | Approximate at 149.50. Changes with rate. |
| USD/CAD | ~$7.45 | ~$0.75 | ~$0.07 | Approximate at 1.3420. Changes with rate. |
| USD/CHF | ~$11.20 | ~$1.12 | ~$0.11 | Approximate at 0.8928. Changes with rate. |
| Values for pairs where USD is the base currency are approximate and change as the exchange rate moves. Use your broker’s pip calculator for live values. | ||||
For a full walkthrough of pip calculations including cross pairs, see: How to Calculate Pips in Forex.
Why Pip Value Differs by Currency Pair
The rule is straightforward once you know the pair structure:
| Pair Type | Examples | Pip Value (USD account) | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| USD is quote currency | EUR/USD, GBP/USD, AUD/USD | Exactly $10 / std lot | Pip already in USD. No conversion needed. |
| USD is base currency | USD/JPY, USD/CAD, USD/CHF | Varies with exchange rate | Pip is in JPY/CAD/CHF. Divide by rate to get USD. |
| Cross pairs (no USD) | EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY | Varies with two rates | Pip is in quote currency, then converted to USD. |
To understand how lot size affects your total pip exposure, see: What Is a Lot Size in Forex?
Pips, Profit, Loss, and Risk
Once you know pip value, the P&L formula is simple:
P&L = Pip movement × Pip value per lot × Number of lots
You buy 1 standard lot of EUR/USD. Price rises 20 pips. Pip value = $10.
Profit = 20 × $10 × 1 = $200
Price moves 15 pips against you. Pip value = $10.
Loss = 15 × $10 × 1 = $150
You place a stop loss 30 pips below entry on EUR/USD (1 standard lot).
Maximum loss = 30 × $10 × 1 = $300
This is how you define your risk before entering. A 30-pip stop on a micro lot risks only $3.
To see pip-based risk inside a complete worked trade, see: Forex Trading Examples.
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