Reading Forex Quotes: Base, Quote, Bid and Ask

Learn how to read forex quotes by understanding currency pairs, base currency, quote currency, bid, ask, spread, pips, chart movement, and live EUR/USD examples.
 
Written byHenry Green
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Key Take Aways

  • A forex quote is an exchange rate between two currencies.
  • Reading forex quotes means understanding the pair, base currency, quote currency, price, bid, ask, spread, and direction of price movement.
  • The first currency in a pair is the base currency, and the second currency is the quote currency.
  • A quote such as EUR/USD 1.1000 means 1 euro costs 1.1000 US dollars.
  • When a forex quote rises, the base currency is strengthening against the quote currency.
  • Traders usually buy at the ask price and sell at the bid price. The spread is the difference between the bid and ask.
Risk note: Reading a forex quote correctly helps explain price, direction, spread, and pips, but it does not predict future movement or guarantee execution price. Spread, slippage, volatility, and position size can affect the result.

Quick Answer: How to Read a Forex Quote

15-second answer: Read a forex quote from left to right. The first currency is the base currency, the second currency is the quote currency, and the price shows how much of the quote currency is needed to buy one unit of the base currency.

A forex quote is an exchange rate between two currencies. It may also be called a forex quotation. The simplest way to read a forex quote is to translate it into: 1 base currency equals X quote currency.

For example, if EUR/USD is quoted at 1.1000, EUR is the base currency, USD is the quote currency, and 1 euro costs 1.1000 US dollars.

Beginner rule: Do not read only the number. Read the full quote: pair, base currency, quote currency, bid, ask, spread, and pip movement.

What Is a Forex Quote?

A forex quote is the price of one currency compared with another currency. Because currencies are traded in pairs, a quote always includes two currencies: the currency being priced and the currency used to express that price.

In a quote such as EUR/USD 1.1000, the pair is EUR/USD and the price is 1.1000. This means one euro is valued at 1.1000 US dollars. If the quote changes, the relationship between the two currencies has changed.

Reading forex quotes means understanding the pair, the base currency, the quote currency, the bid, the ask, the spread, and the direction of price movement.

Forex quotes help answer four beginner questions:

  • What am I trading? The currency pair.
  • What does the price mean? The exchange rate between the base and quote currency.
  • Where would I buy or sell? The ask and bid prices.
  • What changed? The quote movement, often measured in pips.

Currency Pairs: Base Currency vs Quote Currency

A currency pair is two currencies shown together so their values can be compared. The first currency is the base currency. The second currency is the quote currency, sometimes called the counter currency.

The base currency is the unit being priced. The quote currency is the unit used to measure that price. It is also the currency in which the pair's price movement is expressed.

Pair Base Currency Quote Currency Simple Meaning
EUR/USD EUR USD One euro is priced in US dollars.
GBP/JPY GBP JPY One British pound is priced in Japanese yen.
USD/CAD USD CAD One US dollar is priced in Canadian dollars.

Currency pairs can include major pairs, minor pairs, and exotic pairs. Major pairs include the most widely traded currencies, while minor and exotic pairs may have different liquidity and spread conditions. The same reading rule still applies: first currency is base, second currency is quote.

Pair order matters: EUR/USD prices euros in US dollars. USD/EUR would price US dollars in euros. Reversing the pair changes the meaning of the quote.

Some finance sources also use terms such as direct quote and indirect quote depending on the viewer's home currency. Beginners can start with the simpler pair rule: first currency is base, second currency is quote.

How to Read Any Forex Quote in 4 Steps

A simple way to read any quote is to use the four-step quote-reading framework: Pair → Price → Bid/Ask → Pips.

Step What to Read Beginner Question
1. Pair Identify the base and quote currency. What two currencies are being compared?
2. Price Translate the quote into plain English. How much quote currency equals 1 base currency?
3. Bid/Ask Check the buy and sell prices. Which price applies if I buy or sell?
4. Pips Measure price movement. How far did the quote move?
Quote-reading checklist: To read any quote, check the pair, base currency, quote currency, price, bid, ask, spread, pip movement, and whether you are viewing a live price, chart price, bid, ask, or midpoint.

How to Read EUR/USD as a Live Forex Quote

EUR/USD is one of the clearest examples for learning how to read forex quotes. If EUR/USD is quoted at 1.1000, the quote means 1 euro costs 1.1000 US dollars.

Using the four-step framework: Pair = EUR/USD, Price = 1.1000, Bid/Ask = check the live two-way price, and Pips = measure how far the quote moves from one price to another.

Part of the Quote EUR/USD Example Meaning
Pair EUR/USD Euro compared with US dollar.
Base currency EUR The currency being priced.
Quote currency USD The currency used to express the price.
Price 1.1000 1 EUR costs 1.1000 USD.
If EUR/USD rises 1.1000 to 1.1050 EUR strengthens against USD.
If EUR/USD falls 1.1000 to 1.0950 EUR weakens against USD.

To practice with a real market-style layout, open the EUR/USD live price page and identify the pair, displayed live price, chart movement, buy/sell or ask/bid values, spread, point display, and trading conditions.

Practice example: Use the EUR/USD live price page to apply the same Pair → Price → Bid/Ask → Pips process with a real market-style quote.

Using Live Price Pages to Practice Reading Forex Quotes

Live price pages are useful because they show forex quotes in a real market-style format. Instead of only reading a textbook example, a beginner can look at a live pair page and identify the pair, displayed live price, chart movement, buy/sell or bid/ask values, spread, and pip or point display.

When reviewing a live price page, apply the same Pair → Price → Bid/Ask → Pips process:

  • Pair: Which two currencies are being compared?
  • Price: What does the displayed live quote mean in plain English?
  • Bid/ask or buy/sell: Which value applies to buying or selling?
  • Spread: What is the difference between the two-way prices?
  • Chart movement: Is the quote rising or falling over time?
  • Pip or point display: Which decimal movement is being shown?

Some live pages may also show contract size, minimum trade size, margin conditions, leverage conditions, or other trading details. Treat those as platform conditions, not as the basic definition of the quote.

Practice rule: A live price page should not be read as only one number. Read the pair, price, chart, bid/ask or buy/sell values, spread, pip movement, and trading conditions together.

What Are You Buying or Selling in a Forex Quote?

When a trader buys or sells a forex pair, the action applies to the base currency. Buying a pair means buying the base currency and selling the quote currency. Selling a pair means selling the base currency and buying the quote currency.

Action Example What Happens Typical Price Used
Buy the pair Buy EUR/USD Buy EUR and sell USD. Ask price
Sell the pair Sell EUR/USD Sell EUR and buy USD. Bid price

If a trader buys EUR/USD, the trader is buying euros and selling US dollars. This is often called going long. If a trader sells EUR/USD, the trader is selling euros and buying US dollars. This is often called going short.

Core idea: Buying a forex pair means buying the base currency. Selling a forex pair means selling the base currency.

What Happens When a Forex Quote Rises or Falls?

Quote direction is one of the most common beginner confusion points. The rule is simple: when a forex quote rises, the base currency is getting stronger against the quote currency. When a forex quote falls, the base currency is getting weaker against the quote currency.

The quote currency moves in the opposite relationship. If EUR/USD rises, EUR strengthens against USD, or USD weakens against EUR.

Quote Movement Plain-English Meaning Example
EUR/USD rises One euro buys more US dollars than before. EUR/USD moves from 1.1000 to 1.1050.
EUR/USD falls One euro buys fewer US dollars than before. EUR/USD moves from 1.1000 to 1.0950.
USD/JPY rises One US dollar buys more Japanese yen than before. USD/JPY moves from 145.00 to 146.00.
USD/JPY falls One US dollar buys fewer Japanese yen than before. USD/JPY moves from 145.00 to 144.00.

For example, if EUR/USD moves from 1.1000 to 1.1010, one euro now buys $0.0010 more than before. In many standard examples, that is a 10-pip move.

Direction rule: If the quote goes up, the base currency is stronger. If the quote goes down, the base currency is weaker.

Bid, Ask, Spread and Two-Way Forex Quotes

Many live forex quotes are shown as two prices instead of one. This is called a two-way quote. The two prices are the bid and the ask.

  • Bid price: The price at which a trader can usually sell the base currency.
  • Ask price: The price at which a trader can usually buy the base currency.
  • Spread: The difference between the bid price and the ask price.

The bid is usually lower than the ask. The difference between them is the spread.

How to Read a Two-Way Forex Quote

A two-way quote shows both the selling price and the buying price. Depending on the platform label, these may appear as bid/ask or sell/buy values.

Two-Way Quote Bid Ask Spread Meaning
GBP/USD 1.3050 / 1.3053 1.3050 1.3053 0.0003, or 3 pips Sell at the bid, buy at the ask.

The same logic applies to EUR/USD live quotes, where buy/sell or bid/ask values may be shown separately. If a trader buys a pair, the ask price is usually the relevant price. If a trader sells a pair, the bid price is usually the relevant price.

For a deeper explanation, see bid and ask price in forex.

Beginner warning: Before placing a trade, check whether the platform is showing bid, ask, midpoint, buy, sell, or another displayed price.

Forex Quote vs Forex Chart

A forex quote shows the current or displayed exchange rate for a currency pair. A forex chart shows how that price has moved over time.

  • Quote: Shows the current price or two-way price for the pair.
  • Chart: Shows price movement over time.
  • Vertical axis: Usually shows price.
  • Horizontal axis: Usually shows time.

The chart price may show bid, ask, midpoint, or another displayed price depending on the platform. Actual trade execution still depends on the relevant bid or ask price and the trading conditions at the time.

Pips, Points, Quote Currency and Profit/Loss

Forex quote movement is often measured in pips. For many major pairs such as EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and AUD/USD, one pip is commonly the fourth decimal place. A move from 1.1000 to 1.1001 is one pip.

Pair Type Example Quote Common Pip Example Meaning
Most non-JPY pairs EUR/USD 1.1000 1.1000 to 1.1001 One pip in many standard examples.
JPY pairs USD/JPY 145.00 145.00 to 145.01 One pip in many JPY-pair examples.
Fractional pip / point EUR/USD 1.10000 1.10000 to 1.10001 A smaller quoted increment on some platforms.

Some platforms show fractional pips or points. A fractional pip is a smaller movement than a standard pip. Some platforms may use point size to describe the smallest quoted price increment on that platform. A point can be smaller than a pip depending on the platform, so check how the platform defines point size.

How Quote Currency Connects to Pip Value and P/L

The quote currency matters because it is the currency used to express the price of the base currency. It can affect how pip value and profit or loss are calculated, especially when the account currency is different from the quote currency.

For example, if EUR/USD moves from 1.1000 to 1.1010, the quote has moved 10 pips in many standard examples. In EUR/USD, that price movement is expressed in USD. If the account currency is also USD, pip-value examples are usually easier to follow. If the account currency is different, conversion may be needed.

Core idea: A 10-pip move is a price move, not a fixed profit amount. Money impact depends on lot size, pip value, account currency, and platform settings.

The quote shows price movement. Lot size turns that movement into money impact. For the position-size side, see what is lot size in forex. To learn pips in more detail, see what is a pip in forex trading.

Common Beginner Mistakes When Reading Forex Quotes

Many quote-reading mistakes come from looking at the number without reading the full pair. Beginners should watch for these problems:

  • Ignoring currency order: EUR/USD and USD/EUR do not mean the same thing.
  • Forgetting the base currency: The first currency is the one being priced.
  • Forgetting the quote currency: The second currency shows what the base currency is priced in.
  • Misreading quote direction: If EUR/USD rises, EUR is strengthening against USD. If EUR/USD falls, EUR is weakening against USD.
  • Confusing bid and ask: Buying usually happens at the ask, while selling usually happens at the bid.
  • Ignoring the spread: The difference between bid and ask is part of the cost of trading.
  • Assuming all pairs use the same decimals: JPY pairs often look different from pairs such as EUR/USD.
  • Thinking pips equal profit automatically: Pip movement becomes money impact only after lot size and pip value are considered.
  • Reading chart price as execution price: The displayed chart price may not be the exact bid or ask used for a trade.
Final quote-reading rule: Translate every quote as 1 base currency equals X quote currency, then check bid/ask, spread, pips, and chart context before making trade assumptions.

Quick Recap: Reading Forex Quotes

A forex quote shows how much quote currency equals one base currency. For example, EUR/USD 1.1000 means one euro costs 1.1000 US dollars.

Use the four-step framework: Pair → Price → Bid/Ask → Pips. First identify the pair, then translate the price, then check the bid/ask and spread, then measure movement in pips.

If a forex quote rises, the base currency is strengthening. If it falls, the base currency is weakening. For the full beginner pathway, return to forex basics for beginners.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a forex quote?

A forex quote is the exchange rate between two currencies. It shows how much of the quote currency is needed to buy one unit of the base currency.

How do you read a forex quote?

Read a forex quote from left to right. The first currency is the base currency, the second currency is the quote currency, and the number shows how much of the quote currency equals one unit of the base currency.

What is a currency pair in forex?

A currency pair shows two currencies being compared. The first currency is the base currency, and the second currency is the quote currency.

What does EUR/USD 1.1000 mean?

EUR/USD 1.1000 means one euro costs 1.1000 US dollars. EUR is the base currency, USD is the quote currency, and 1.1000 is the exchange rate.

What happens when a forex quote goes up?

When a forex quote goes up, the base currency is strengthening against the quote currency. The base currency can buy more of the quote currency than before.

What is the base currency in a forex quote?

The base currency is the first currency in a forex pair. In EUR/USD, EUR is the base currency.

What is the quote currency in a forex quote?

The quote currency is the second currency in a forex pair. In EUR/USD, USD is the quote currency. It is the currency used to express the price of the base currency.

Do you buy forex at the bid or ask?

Traders usually buy at the ask price and sell at the bid price. The difference between the two prices is the spread.

What is a two-way forex quote?

A two-way forex quote shows both the bid price and the ask price. The bid is usually the price to sell the base currency, and the ask is usually the price to buy it.

Is the chart price the same as the bid or ask?

Not always. Some charts show the bid, ask, midpoint, or another displayed price depending on the platform. Trade execution usually depends on the relevant bid or ask price.

What is the spread in a forex quote?

The spread is the difference between the bid price and the ask price. It is commonly measured in pips and is part of the cost of trading.

Why do JPY forex quotes look different?

Many JPY pairs are quoted with fewer decimal places than pairs such as EUR/USD or GBP/USD. This is why USD/JPY may look like 145.00 while EUR/USD may look like 1.1000.

Related Contents

EUR/USD Live PriceSee a live example of a forex quote, chart movement, buy and sell prices, spread, and trading conditions.
What Is a Pip in Forex Trading?Learn how pips measure price movement after reading a forex quote.
Bid and Ask Price in ForexUnderstand how bid, ask, and spread affect quote reading and trading costs.
What Is Lot Size in Forex?See how quote movement becomes money impact through position size.
Forex Basics for BeginnersReturn to the main beginner hub for forex meaning, quotes, pips, lots, leverage, and risk.

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